Blog

2020 National Green Building Standard Now Available

  • Blog

    2020 National Green Building Standard Now Available

                                                                                                                   

    The 2020 edition of the ICC-700 National Green Building Standard® (NGBS) has been approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and is available for public use. The NGBS provides the roadmap for residential professionals to integrate green practices and features appropriate for their businesses and local housing markets. As of April 2020, more than 216,000 homes have been NGBS Green certified.

    The 2020 edition is available for download at nahb.org/ngbs and is the fourth edition of the standard.  This update reflects significant changes based on evolving market conditions and feedback received over the past decade from those using the standard. This edition expands the application of innovative practices and offers additional options toward achieving certification. Changes include:

    • A new Chapter 12: Certified Compliance Path — for Single-Family Homes, Townhomes and Duplexes — that is intended to provide an entry point to certification for single-family builders, particularly production builders.
    • An expanded scope that now includes certification for:
      • Mixed-use buildings in their entirety as long as the residential portion of the building is greater than 50% of gross floor area; and
      • Assisted living facilities, residential board and care facilities, and group homes.
    • A new water-efficiency performance path using an index that generates a score relative to a standard baseline home and equates that to an NGBS certification level.
    • A substantially revised remodeling chapter that offers:
      • An option to utilize a phased approach for multifamily remodeling projects; and
      • A choice of prescriptive or performance compliance paths for energy and water efficiency.

    The NGBS includes high-performance building practices in six areas: Lot Design and Development, Resource Efficiency, Water Efficiency, Energy Efficiency, Indoor Environmental Quality, and Building Operation & Maintenance.

    The NGBS has several certification levels — Certified, Bronze, Silver, Gold and Emerald — providing residential building professionals options to integrate sustainability and high performance into their project at a level most appropriate for their business model, customer base and local housing market.

    The NGBS continues to provide architects, builders and developers the flexibility needed to design and construct homes and mixed-use buildings that are sustainable, cost effective and appropriate for a home’s geographic location.

    “The benefit of the NGBS is its flexibility — that I’m able to pick practices that work together rather than have a very prescriptive set of practices that I have to follow,” says John Barrows, NAHB Sustainability and Green Building Subcommittee Chair and founder of B3 Builder Group in Bridgehampton, N.Y. “I can tailor the practices from the options in the program so that I meet my clients’ budget a little bit easier.”

    Download the NGBS for free at nahb.org/ngbs.

    For more details about NAHB’s sustainable and green building initiatives, contact Sustainability and Green Building Program Manager Michelle Diller. To stay current on high-performance residential building, follow NAHB’s Sustainability and Green Building team on Twitter.

                                                                                                                   
    2020-05-26
    Blog
    2020-05-26

                                                                                                               

The 2020 edition of the ICC-700 National Green Building Standard® (NGBS) has been approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and is available for public use. The NGBS provides the roadmap for residential professionals to integrate green practices and features appropriate for their businesses and local housing markets. As of April 2020, more than 216,000 homes have been NGBS Green certified.

The 2020 edition is available for download at nahb.org/ngbs and is the fourth edition of the standard.  This update reflects significant changes based on evolving market conditions and feedback received over the past decade from those using the standard. This edition expands the application of innovative practices and offers additional options toward achieving certification. Changes include:

  • A new Chapter 12: Certified Compliance Path — for Single-Family Homes, Townhomes and Duplexes — that is intended to provide an entry point to certification for single-family builders, particularly production builders.
  • An expanded scope that now includes certification for:
    • Mixed-use buildings in their entirety as long as the residential portion of the building is greater than 50% of gross floor area; and
    • Assisted living facilities, residential board and care facilities, and group homes.
  • new water-efficiency performance path using an index that generates a score relative to a standard baseline home and equates that to an NGBS certification level.
  • A substantially revised remodeling chapter that offers:
    • An option to utilize a phased approach for multifamily remodeling projects; and
    • A choice of prescriptive or performance compliance paths for energy and water efficiency.

The NGBS includes high-performance building practices in six areas: Lot Design and Development, Resource Efficiency, Water Efficiency, Energy Efficiency, Indoor Environmental Quality, and Building Operation & Maintenance.

The NGBS has several certification levels — Certified, Bronze, Silver, Gold and Emerald — providing residential building professionals options to integrate sustainability and high performance into their project at a level most appropriate for their business model, customer base and local housing market.

The NGBS continues to provide architects, builders and developers the flexibility needed to design and construct homes and mixed-use buildings that are sustainable, cost effective and appropriate for a home’s geographic location.

“The benefit of the NGBS is its flexibility — that I’m able to pick practices that work together rather than have a very prescriptive set of practices that I have to follow,” says John Barrows, NAHB Sustainability and Green Building Subcommittee Chair and founder of B3 Builder Group in Bridgehampton, N.Y. “I can tailor the practices from the options in the program so that I meet my clients’ budget a little bit easier.”

Download the NGBS for free at nahb.org/ngbs.

For more details about NAHB’s sustainable and green building initiatives, contact Sustainability and Green Building Program Manager Michelle Diller. To stay current on high-performance residential building, follow NAHB’s Sustainability and Green Building team on Twitter.

  • Basic page

    Community, Economic & Workforce Development Steering Committee

    Responsible for all matters pertaining to housing, community and economic development, public works, and workforce development including the creation of affordable housing and housing options for different populations, residential, commercial, and industrial development, and building and housing codes. Policy Platform & Resolutions 2022-2023 2022 NACo Legislative Priorities
    page

    <p>Responsible for all matters pertaining to housing, community and economic development, public works, and workforce development including the creation of affordable housing and housing options for different populations, residential,

Related Posts

Related Resources

More From

  • Housing Solutions Matchmaker Tool

    The housing policy matchmaker aspires to be a resource for local officials, providing information that assists in understanding the elements of local housing markets, identifying key challenges and providing resources on policies that might help enhance the local housing landscape.

    Learn More