The Green Side of Precast COncrete
By Andrew Zumwalt-Hathaway
Clients are demanding greener, more
sustainable buildings. Precast concrete manufacturers,
contractors and specifiers are increasingly being
asked to provide a product that can demonstrate environmentally
responsible attributes.
One measure of environmentally sensitive buildings
is the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design) Green Building Rating System, which “scores”
a building’s sustainability according to a host
of features, including materials. Understanding the
LEED rating system, how the sustainable attributes
of precast concrete contribute to LEED certification
and the documentation procedures that demonstrate
compliance with LEED will enable precast concrete
manufacturers and contractors and specifiers to respond
to the market and develop more sustainable products
and procedures.
The LEED Green Building Rating
System
Established in 1998, LEED is a voluntary, consensus-based
national standard for developing high-performance,
sustainable buildings. Developed by members of the
U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) representing many
segments of the building industry and environmental
science, LEED has several goals:
• Define what qualifies as a green building
by establishing a common standard of measurement;
• Promote integrated, whole-building design
practices;
• Recognize environmental leadership in the
building industry;
• Stimulate green competition;
• Raise consumer awareness of green building
benefits; and
• Transform the building market.
While the current number of registered LEED projects
only accounts for about 5 percent of the U.S. building
market, this number has grown from 12 certified pilot
LEED projects in 1999 to 1,262 registered LEED projects
as of April 2004.
LEED certification can be achieved at the Certified,
Silver, Gold or Platinum levels based on the number
of LEED credits awarded after a project meets seven
LEED prerequisites. The LEED rating system divides
these credits and prerequisites into five categories:
Sustainable Sites; Water Efficiency; Energy &
Atmosphere; Indoor Environmental Quality; and Innovation
and Design Process. Prerequisites and credits are
based mostly on established governmental or trade
group standards. The number of points a project earns
by satisfying the environmental performance criteria
of the various LEED credits determines the level at
which a project can be certified.
While the LEED rating system was initially designed
for commercial high-rise office buildings, LEED 2.1
for New Construction includes requirements suitable
for multi-family residential high-rise projects. The
USGBC is currently developing guidelines for residential
and laboratory projects as well. The USGBC is also
currently making the final revision to the LEED for
Existing Buildings Rating System.
Environmental
attributes of precast concrete
Precast concrete has environmental attributes that
can make it preferable to cast-in-place concrete.
Plant casting is more resource-efficient in the use
of formwork and reduces waste generated at the construction
site. Also, standardized precast elements can be installed
more quickly and efficiently, resulting in faster
construction times and less on-site equipment noise
and emissions. Gaining additional recognition is precast/prestressed
concrete, which uses less material to achieve similar
load-bearing capacity.
These types of environmental attributes are important
in terms of environmental excellence and contribute
to the material’s embodied energy. However,
these attributes relate only indirectly to existing
LEED points. For instance, reducing waste generated
on site makes it easier for a project to capture points
awarded in the Construction Waste Management credit
for diverting 50 percent to 75 percent of construction
waste from area landfills. Less formwork on site also
means that less wood has to be purchased for a project,
which makes it easier to earn the Certified Wood credit,
as certified wood can be an expensive option for formwork.
Precast concrete products do relate directly to four
LEED credits and a total of eight points: Site Credit
6, Stormwater Management; Site Credit 7, Heat Island
Reduction; Materials & Resources Credit 4, Recycled
Content; and Materials and Resources Credit 5, Regional
Materials. In addition, there may be opportunities
for precast concrete to contribute to capturing LEED
Innovation Points.
Stormwater
Management
LEED Site Credit 6, Stormwater Management, awards
one point for measures taken to manage or reduce stormwater
run-off. Precast permeable paving systems reduce run-off
by allowing infiltration of rain into the subsurface.
LEED has a simplified calculation to demonstrate compliance
based solely on the run-off coefficient of site surfaces.
Typically, according to the LEED Reference Guide,
precast pervious paving systems have a run-off coefficient
of 0.60. The run-off coefficient relates the amount
of run-off to the amount of precipitation received.
Therefore, a run-off coefficient of 0.6 indicates
that 60 percent of the rain falling on pervious paving
is run-off and 40 percent is able to percolate into
the subsurface. Precast pervious paving systems would
likely need to be combined with additional measures
like green roof assemblies or rain water harvesting
to fully comply with this LEED credit.
Pervious paving can also help a project earn a second
LEED point within the Stormwater Management credit
for stormwater treatment. For this point, LEED requires
EPA Best Management Practices that effectively remove
at least 80 percent of the total suspended solids
(TSS) and 40 percent of total phosphorous (TP) from
stormwater volumes leaving the site. As with the credit
above, additional measures like infiltration basins
may be required for a project to fully comply with
this credit, but precast pervious paving systems do
contribute toward compliance.
Heat Island
Reduction
The LEED Site Credit 7, Heat Island Reduction, awards
two points for measures that reflect heat from buildings
and site paving. The “Heat Island Effect”
is the result of constructed surfaces absorbing solar
energy and retaining heat, which raises urban temperatures
and increases building cooling loads.
The first point is achieved by specific measures adopted
to reflect solar heat gain from a project’s
non-roof surface area. One of these measures requires
that 30 percent of a site’s non-roof impervious
surfaces either be shaded, have an albedo of at least
0.3, or be an open-grid permeable paving system. (Albedo
refers to solar reflectance, and an albedo of 0.3
means that 30 percent of all the energy striking a
reflecting surface is reflected back into the atmosphere
and 70 percent of the energy is absorbed by the surface.)
Light-colored pavers can usually meet the 0.3 albedo
threshold.
Projects can also earn this point by constructing
underground or aboveground parking structures, which
is a practice that lends itself to the extensive use
of precast concrete materials.
The second Heat Island Reduction credit requires that
50 percent of a building’s roof area be covered
by a vegetative roof assembly, or that 75 percent
of a building’s roof area be covered by ENERGY
STAR-compliant roofing materials with an emissivity
of at least 0.9. There are new roof pavers currently
on the market that meet these criteria.
Recycled
Content
The Recycled Content credit in the Materials and Resources
Section awards one point if, in aggregate, 5 percent
of a project’s total material value (by cost)
is comprised of post-consumer and/or post-industrial
recycled content. A second point is awarded for reaching
a 10 percent threshold. Since these percentages are
based on cost, buildings that employ precast concrete
structural systems can more easily earn the credit
if precast concrete manufacturers are able to include
high percentages of recycled content into their products.
The EPA’s new initiative, “Coal Combustion
Products Partnership,” promotes the use of industrial
byproducts in concrete to make it a more sustainable
material. Industrial byproducts well suited for replacing
portions of portland cement include fly ash and ground-granulated
blast furnace slag. Using fly ash in concrete generally
decreases permeability, improves sulfate resistance
and allows for lower water content, thus improving
overall performance. Ground granulated blast furnace
slag consists of silicates, aluminous silicates of
calcium and blast furnace slag from molten iron production.
It is often used in concrete requiring maximum durability,
higher strength, fire-resistance, better insulation
and lighter weight.
One of the drawbacks to using fly ash or slag in concrete
is increased curing times, but this is not as great
a concern in precast manufacturing as it is in cast-in-place
applications where construction schedules can be delayed.
These types of industrial byproducts are considered
post-industrial recycled materials, and while they
do improve concrete performance, they typically account
for only 2.5 percent to 5 percent of the overall concrete
material.
Steel used for concrete reinforcement is typically
composed of 95 percent post-consumer recycled content,
but perhaps the biggest area where precast concrete
materials can contribute to this credit is in the
use of recycled aggregate, as it typically accounts
for 70 percent to 80 percent of the concrete volume.
While this practice is not common in the mainstream
concrete market, precast manufacturers have more opportunities
to test and experiment with design mixes that include
recycled aggregate.
The most common materials recycled as concrete aggregate
are glass cullet and crushed recycled concrete itself.
Most glass, including types that cannot be reused
in recycled glass bottle manufacturing (such as clear
window glass) can be used as concrete aggregate, but
only in non-structural applications such as precast
pavers.
Regional
Materials
The Regional Materials credit in the LEED Materials
and Resources section awards one point for projects
that, in aggregate, utilize materials manufactured
within a 500-mile radius of the project site. Manufacturers
who provide materials to projects within 500 miles
can contribute toward a project’s achievement
of this credit.
According to LEED, “manufacturing location”
refers to the point of final assembly of a product.
No matter where the various materials that make up
precast concrete originate, the precast plant is the
location that needs to be within 500 miles of a project.
A second point is available in the Regional Materials
credit if, of the 20 percent of regionally manufactured
materials, 50 percent of the raw materials that make
up a product originate from within a 500-mile radius
of the project. For example, if the aggregate was
quarried within 500 miles of a given project site,
that material would help contribute to earning this
point.
Innovation
and design process
LEED also awards up to four Innovation credits for
projects that can demonstrate exemplary performance
meeting stated LEED requirements. For instance, if
a project exceeds the 10 percent recycled content
threshold by another 5 percent, it can pick up an
extra LEED point.
Innovation credits can also be earned by employing
sustainable design strategies not included in LEED.
For instance, close collaboration with structural
engineers on a given project to develop innovative
systems that are more resource efficient or less energy
intensive may earn a project an additional point.
Documentation procedures
Precast concrete manufacturers and contractors will
be called upon by the client to provide documentation
of a given product’s environmental attributes.
Design teams experienced with LEED will include these
documentation requirements in the submittal requirements
of the bid documents. However, LEED documentation
requirements are commonly left out of a project’s
submittal requirements, which results in lost time
tracking down information on recycled content or albedo
after the fact.
The site credits addressed above will require the
manufacturer to have tested for the albedo or actual
TSS and TP removal efficiency.
Precast concrete manufacturers
will also be asked to certify the recycled content
of their products. In many cases this will require
the manufacturer to break out the material value of
the cement, sand, aggregate and rebar, and provide
the respective percentages of recycled content.
The Regional Materials credit will require that precast
companies certify the location of manufacture as being
within a 500-mile radius of the project site, which
is obviously easy to determine. However, manufacturers
will also need to track the origins of raw materials
and break out the material values as with the recycled
content credit.
This is easy to determine for materials like raw aggregate
where the quarry can be easily identified, but the
origin of recycled-content steel rebar or recycled
aggregate may be more difficult to determine. Those
in charge of procurement for precast manufacturers
will need to investigate the origins of these materials
to provide the appropriate documentation.
* Faddis Concrete Products is a certified plant under
NPCA’s Quality Assurance/Plant Certification
Program.