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L.A.
and San Francisco vie for title of 'greenest city'
Both
cities' mayors have proposed new building standards. Newsom's
plan is much more stringent, but Villaraigosa's would cover
twice as much space
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By
Margot Roosevelt
Los Angeles Times
April 22, 2008
Mirror,
mirror on the wall: Who is the greenest of them all?
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has a plan
to slash his city's planet-warming greenhouse gases to 35%
below the 1990 level by 2030, and make L.A. the "cleanest
and greenest city in the country."
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom has a
blueprint to cut his city's greenhouse gases to 20% below
the 1990 level by 2012, creating "the greenest large city
in the United States of America."
FOR THE
RECORD:
Green cities: In an article in Tuesday's California section
about Los Angeles' and San Francisco's rivalry over
"green city" programs, the name of the director of
the Department of the Environment for the city and county of
San Francisco was incorrect. He is Jared Blumenfeld, not
Blumenthal. —
In both metropolises, those lofty promises are facing a
critical test.
Today, the L.A. City Council will hold a public hearing and
vote on Villaraigosa’s
proposal to make private developers meet
nationally-developed green building standards. Next month, the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors will act on Newsom’s
proposed building ordinance.
Which is stricter? San Francisco's, by a long shot.
Which will remove more carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse
gas, from the atmosphere? Los Angeles' -- but only because
it's a bigger city, with a population approaching 4 million;
San Francisco's population is under 800,000.
By and large, city governments can't control gas-guzzling SUVs,
devastated forests and big industrial pollution, all of which
are major causes of global warming. On the other hand, the
built environment is their bailiwick. Buildings account for an
estimated 43% of all greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.,
compared with 32% from transportation and 25% from industry.
But buildings' environmental footprints can be dramatically
reduced by using low-irrigation landscaping; efficient
heating, air-conditioning and lighting; solar panels; roof
gardens; and low-emission paints, glues and carpets.
Seventeen states, including
California, and 80 localities require public buildings to
meet green standards. But so far, only one state and 14 cities
are applying those rules to private construction.
Los Angeles would be the biggest city to join the list. Still,
San Francisco's proposed standards "would far surpass
those of any other large city," according to Brooks
Rainwater, director of local relations for the American
Institute of Architects and author of a comprehensive
study on green building programs.
Both cities use the Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design system, developed by an industry-led nonprofit, the U.S.
Green Building Council. The group audits buildings after
construction and judges them as LEED certified, the most
lenient standard, up through LEED silver, gold, and platinum.
The LEED system is spreading rapidly across the country, with
architects and developers competing to offer customers the
most eco-chic projects.
Since 2003, L.A.'s public structures, such as libraries and
fire stations, have had to be LEED certified if they have more
than 7,500 square feet of floor space. But San Francisco has
gone a step further, requiring LEED silver certification for
any public construction over 5,000 square feet.
San Francisco also has a higher standard for fast-track
permitting: Buildings must be LEED gold to qualify, while the
threshold in Los Angeles is silver.
Nancy Sutley, L.A.'s deputy mayor for energy and environment,
acknowledged that her city is moving more cautiously, but
noted the "sheer scale" of its construction activity
compared with its Northern California rival. "We think of
San Francisco as a boutique city," she said.
Jared Blumenthal, director of San Francisco's Department of
the Environment, counters that among other multimillion-dollar
projects, his city is converting a 500-acre former Naval base
into 6,500 units of housing that will be certified as a LEED
platinum neighborhood development. "Hardly
boutique!" he exclaimed.
And with slight condescension, Blumenthal adds, "We are
thrilled that L.A. is now going to start reducing its CO2 . .
. If L.A. implemented our ordinance, it would have an even
greater impact for all Angelenos."
L.A.'s new proposal for private construction, which would take
effect in November, is looser than San Francisco's in every
category. It would require the equivalent of LEED
certification only for buildings of 50,000 square feet or
more. In San Francisco, over the next four years, commercial
buildings of 25,000 square feet or more would have to meet
LEED gold standards, and residential high-rises of that size
would have to meet LEED silver levels.
The L.A. plan would cover low-rise residential and single
family homes only in developments with at least 50 units. San
Francisco's would cover all single-family homes and low-rise
developments.
Sutley noted that the Los Angeles ordinance would cover more
than twice as much space -- 7.5 million square feet -- as the
San Francisco program, which would cover about 3 million
square feet. "There were legitimate concerns about
overwhelming the system," she said. "We will learn
by doing."
Some critics discern a lack of political commitment in L.A.'s
plan. "San Francisco's Department of the Environment is a
robust, well-funded agency led by professionals with
experience in green building," says Matt Peterson,
president of Global Green, a nonprofit group that has advised
both cities on their programs. But L.A.'s effort, he said, is
understaffed and lacking in authority.
Sutley countered that green building is "a high
priority" for the mayor, and said the city's existing
staff has ample experience working with LEED-certified
municipal buildings.
As for San Francisco's stricter ordinance, she said with a
chuckle, "I don't know what to tell you. It's a different
group up there."
margot.roosevelt@latimes.com
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Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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