Issues > July/August 2005 (#109) > The Top 10 Green Schools in the U.S.: 2005

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Jane Holtz Kay, a journalist, architecture critic of The Nation and author of Asphalt Nation among other books, is currently working on Last Chance Landscape, a book on climate change for the University of California Press.

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Photo: The Top 10 Green Schools in the U.S.: 2005

The early-American school kids swaddled with scarves to within a breath of suffocating as they hiked to the little red school house didn't know that their classrooms suffered from faulty insulation and bad air. But that's because no one thought much about the coal fire's smoke, the oil lantern's lung-clogging potential, the dank air's capacity to promote mildew and molds, or the contaminated water from the well.

That was then: before "green" and "sustainable" were "invented." And now? Looking at such nods to urban ecology as Manhattan's green-roofed Calhoun school, we see a sample of the neighborhood classrooms' new sustainability and a sign that we know—and do better—now. Or at least some of us do, like the state of Washington, which last spring took the lead in insisting that all school and public buildings go green, i.e. adopt LEED standards as rated by the U.S. Green Building Council.

To be sure, the sustainability experts can list and act on everything from toxic cleaning products to off-gassing materials; from pesticides and bad air that exacerbate asthma within to PCBs from old caulk without. And yet, the Green Schools Initiative, a multi-school effort to make schools healthier and more ecologically sustainable, found that the classrooms in half of America's ll5,000 schools suffer from poor indoor environments. And even the school's surroundings can be hazardous: A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association this July showed that pesticide spraying near schools has made children acutely ill, causing vomiting, wheezing and conjunctivitis. And, as others assuredly know, the indoor air and clean-up chemicals can do the same.

The Criteria

Herein, then, searching for better schools with better environments, we looked to the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards, as well as a number of our own insights and impressions, to come up with criteria by which we measured our green school picks:

1 - Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building standards:

a) Sustainable Siting—site selection, alternative transportation, stormwater management, urban redevelopment

b) Water Efficiency—water efficient landscaping, water use reduction, innovative waste water use

c) Energy & Atmosphere—CFC reductions, renewable energy, reduced energy consumption, green power, reducing ozone

d) Materials and Resources—building and resource reuse, local materials, recycled content, certified wood

e) Indoor Environmental Quality—indoor air quality, CO2, ventilation, low-volatile organic compound (VOC) materials, thermal comfort, daylighting

f) Innovation in Design

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Filed under: Schools, Playgrounds

Green Guide 109 | July/August 2005 | For Your School