-
Naomi Sachs, ASLA, EDAC posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years agoAnyone have a good detail/case study for using planting islands as small stormwater catchment areas? This is for the northeast, and the parking lot will most likely have standard curbs, but if there’s another idea… Just getting started on the project, but excited about the possibilities. Thanks!
-
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years agoHas anyone taken the LEED Green Associate exam? Please share your exam experience.
-
Susan Murray posted an update in the group
L.A.R.E. – ANYTHING GOES 16 years agoKatrina – Sorry I accidentally posted a question about the practice tests to your discussion earlier !!
-
STEPHANIE Landregan FASLA LEED posted an update in the group
L.A.R.E. – ANYTHING GOES 16 years agoKatrina,
If your program is LAAB accredited, then you should be fine. Email me priviately and I can make some recommendations for you to address the LATC staff.
Stephanie -
Geoffrey Katz posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years agoBaskar – Could you go into more detail with your comments…
-
Baskar G posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years agonatural topography( wild grasses area or growing naturally ) can take as landscaped area? or it should be neatly landscaped ( dry or xeroxscping_) area? for site selection ?.
-
Robin Alyse Doyle posted an update in the group
Digital assets and resources 16 years, 1 month ago -
Robin Alyse Doyle posted an update in the group
Digital assets and resources 16 years, 1 month ago -
Alexandru Gheorghe posted an update in the group
Middle East Landscape 16 years, 1 month agoHey there ! I joined this group beacause I’m interested in working in ME and I hope mabe I can find some sugestions on how to do this. Glad to be here. If anyone has a tip on this idea I would be glad and very happy to read it. thanks!
-
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoI also got this information from GBCI: If you area a LEED AP and you choose a specialty – there is no harm in keeping your enrollment and that if you do not report any continuing education hours at the end of the 2 years your LEED AP with Specialty credential will expire, however you will remain a LEED AP without specialty.
-
Jim Del Carpio posted an update in the group
Irrigation Design 16 years, 1 month agoHi All,
A little Bio. for your consumption. I started irrigation design in 2001 in Arizona. Worked with a L. A. in Arizona, who exclusively went after IRRIG. projects. He did very well, However I wanted to grow to other areas and moved on. Jump to the present, In the last office I worked in (March 2009), My billable hours for Irrigation Design was…[Read more] -
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoFYI: LEED Credentialing Maintenance Program (CMP) – read last sentence!!
Enrollment Options: LEED APs without specialty will be provided with an enrollment window, a 2-year period between fall 2009 and fall 2011. LEED APs without specialty can view their enrollment window through My Credentials at http://www.gbci.org. The last enrollment windows close…[Read more]
-
Charles A. Warsinske posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoIts the pathogens. Greywater is almost as bad as sewer water. Getting people sick in the name of LEED does not seem to be the way to go.
-
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoPotentially greywater could be treated in a bioswale or series of detention ponds, but in California, this system is impossible to permit (Does anyone know of any States who allow this?). However, you can treat stormwater in that method.
-
Baskar G posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agohow about grey water treating with wetlands/ aerobic system? there is need for open bond rite? instead using in sewage water treatment along with chemicals?
-
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoThere are strict standards for greywater irrigation – it should not come in contact with people – therefore it is subsurface and also its application is dependent on soil percolation rate, meaning it should not pond to the surface. Not to say with all the rules it is not possible. More potable water is used irrigating landscapes than for basic…[Read more]
-
Charles A. Warsinske posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 1 month agoI always thought that greywater has too many pathogens to be safely used for irrigation anywhere people would come in contact with it. Not true?
-
Oona Johnsen posted an update in the group
LEED in Landscape Architecture 16 years, 2 months agoI just started working at a new firm, Rana Creek. The first LEED project I am working on is a large scale neighborhood renovation project that will capture greywater from showers & laundry for a for landscape irrigation. It turns out from our initial calculations, all the homes intended for water harvesting collected too much water, so we needed…[Read more]
-
Cole Slater posted an update in the group
Stormwater 16 years, 2 months agoWell said Mark, our proffesion is so variable that it makes it easy for others to put us in a box on one side of it which I find to be simply ‘lanscaping’. We need to work together as a profession to be “armed with facts and calculations” to give creditability to the profession across the board.
Happy Thanksgiving!
-
Mark O'Hara posted an update in the group
Stormwater 16 years, 2 months agoThis issue is complicated and to say that rain gardens are the answer is not much different than the traditional infrastructure approach, where one solution can solve all problems. In most instances and geographic locations, the solution needs to include water quality and quantity solutions to solve the problem. Rain gardens, bio-swales and…[Read more]
- Load More
