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“What is a LEED certification checklist?”
The LEED sustainable building rating system is one of the key global players for green homes. The system, whose name stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, provides the sector with rating system frameworks for all types of new and existing builds.
This post will cover a complete LEED certification checklist for the Homes framework, the most applicable one for single-family residential units.
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To understand the LEED Homes certification system or any of the LEED systems, you must become acquainted with its structure. The key terms associated with its structure can be summarized as:
To receive certification, a building must meet specific requirements in various sustainability sub-topics. These sub-topics are fundamental for a holistic approach to sustainability. Additionally, these LEED categories also function as a sort of skeleton for the rating system and organize its many credits in organizable chunks.
The LEED system has nine key rating categories:
These are what you’re after. The LEED credits give you the points to achieve your sustainable home and get our rating. As seen below, there are a variety of credits you can choose to pursue our rating within the LEED framework.
Prerequisites are a type of credit, but one with no points allocated to them. They identify essential parts which make a building sustainable. Fulfilling these create the foundation for your project. Think of them as the foundation of your building — without them, you can’t have your home.
The more points you get, the higher the reward. As mentioned previously, points are obtained through the completion of credits. Also, different credits are allocated a different number of points depending on their sustainability potential.
Additionally, your final certification level will depend on how many points you have been awarded. Therefore, it’s essential to understand them before starting your project design, to set realistic targets and optimize how many points you can get.
With LEED, you have a total of 110 points to be awarded. Working bottom-up (compared to the previous section), these points are obtained from the credits.
The credits you can achieve for LEED Homes can be summarized here for the Design and Construction rating system.
This Excel-based tool serves as your checklist for your rating and tallies your points as we go along.
You can also see that certain credits are prerequisites. Specifically, for LEED Homes, you must consider:
Category | Prerequisite |
---|---|
Location and Transportation | Floodplain avoidance |
Sustainable Sites | Construction Activity Pollution Prevention |
No Invasive Plants | |
Water Efficiency | Water Metering |
Energy and Atmosphere | Minimum Energy Performance |
Energy Metering | |
Education of the Homeowner, tenant, or Building Manager | |
Materials and Resources | Certified Tropical Wood |
Durability Management | |
Indoor Environmental Quality | Ventilation |
Combustion Venting | |
Garage Pollutant Protection | |
Radon-Resistant Construction | |
Air Filtering | |
Environmental Tobacco Smoke | |
Compartmentalization | |
Innovation | Preliminary Rating |
As you can see, the Indoor Environmental Quality category has the largest number of prerequisites. Therefore, while energy and resource savings are significant for your sustainable home, your health is a key priority. To explore these credits in further detail, you can explore the LEED Credit Library.
Now that you understand the fundamental foundations for your sustainable building (pun intended), you must know how to maximize your points. To do this, you need to consider the available credits.
To see where all the meat is, let’s consider where the points are in the LEED Home categories (in order of size):
So, you can see that to maximize possible points; you need to focus on the Energy and Atmosphere category. What’s more, if you refer to the checklist, you’ll notice that 30 of the 37 points of this category are allocated to the credit Annual Energy Use; achieving this would leave us just 10 points shy from Certified certification.
To put the scale of this credit into perspective, the average credit point (excluding this one) is just 4.3.
1. LEED Energy Budget. This budget is based on the ENERGY STAR for Home and HERS Index Target Procedure for National Program Requirements v3 with some adjustments.
2. HERS Index. To achieve points via this pathway, you must earn a HERS index of 70 or greater.
So, if we choose path 1 and obtain an energy use saving reduction of 37%, we would get 23 points. Additionally, if a house has a Passive House (PHIUS) certificate, it may automatically earn 20 points — check out our Passive House post.
We must remember that this credit would require significantly more time and monetary investments than other credits. Therefore, reading up on passive cooling may also interest you.
Similar to Annual Energy Use, Total Water Use also functions via a scalable metric, where you must provide at least a 20% reduction in water use (3 points).
In general, all the credits do not take an “all or nothing” approach, meaning that points can be awarded across the rating system with even minimal measures (relative to the LEED requirements).
The LEED rating system presents itself as a viable tool for achieving more sustainable homes.
In this post, we looked at a complete guide to the LEED certification system by identifying how to understand the system and going through a checklist you can use.
When starting a rating checklist, you must first understand the prerequisites you’d need as a foundation.
But before running off to complete them, you should also understand if and how you can build upon them to boost our credit scores.
Additionally, remember that credits are typically scalable according to how sustainable you make your home. That is to say, if you provide a 34% saving instead of a 50% maximum saving, you would generally be able to still get some points in.
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