n U.S. Greeouncil C Building BEN REED l a u Ann it m m u S EDWARD GULICK, Winpower West AIA, LEED AP BD+C High Plains Architects Montana SKY G I B THE I K S “ 2015 Health and Community Ed is a Billings native who has a passion for making his hometown a more healthy, inviting, and sustainable community. He is a licensed architect and a LEED® Accredited Professional with a Building Design & Construction specialty. He received his Bachelor of Arts from Pomona College and Master of Architecture from Yale University. In his professional career, Ed has designed 4 LEED Platinum buildings and overseen the documentation for 2 additional LEED platinum buildings. Ed advocates for his values through his involvement with the Billings Bicycle + Pedestrian Advisory Committee and Northern Plains Resource Council. Description: This presentation will explain the current policies for small-scale renewable energy in Montana and expound on policy changes that would make solar more accessible to all of us! We will provide real world examples of Montanans experiencing artificial legal barriers to accessing renewable energy, and case studies of states with policies that make solar more accessible. One policy solution for Montana that we will discuss is community solar. In addition, the presentation provides background information on current trends in the solar industry related to cost, amount installed, and employment. Register at: http://www.cvent.com/d/z4q5n2 MONTANA | i The B Additional Information, contact: Jana Felt, LEED AP | janavanfelt@gmail.com or Chris Anderson, PE, LEED AP | chris @djanda.com | 406-721-4320 KEYNOTE Speaker A Cody, Wyoming native, Ben has a Bachelor of Science in Finance from the University of Wyoming. While at the University of Wyoming, he also earned his MBA and began graduate studies in regulatory economics. He received his PHD in Finance from University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, where he continued studying regulatory economics. Ben taught at the University of Wyoming and Montana State University Billings before starting his business, Winpower West, 27 years ago. www.winpowerwest.com January 30-31 t r o s e R y rica k e S m A g Bi g g e s t S k i i n g i n” Making Solar Accessible to All: Community Solar Policy for Montana Ben is the owner/operator of the renewable energy business Winpower West based in Billings, Montana. He is a policy advocate for new, sustainable energy policies that embrace renewable energy resources with both the Northern Plains Resource Council and the Montana Renewable Energy Association. MONTANA Jason McLennan Author, Architect, Designer and Futurist Considered one of the most influential individuals in the green building movement today, and the recipient of the prestigious Buckminster Fuller Prize (the planet’s top prize for socially responsible design), Jason F. McLennan’s work has made a pivotal impact on the shape and direction of green building in the United States and Canada. McLennan is a much sought after designer, presenter and consultant on a wide variety of green building and sustainability topics around the world. He serves as the CEO of the International Living Future Institute – a leading NGO that focuses on the transformation to a world that is socially just, culturally rich and ecologically restorative. McLennan was recently awarded the “World Changer Award” by Green Biz magazine and voted by Yes! Magazine, as one of the 15 people helping to reshape the world. He is the author of five books on green building including the Philosophy of Sustainable Design – considered by many as the ‘bible’ for green building. w w w . j a s o n m c l e n n a n . c o m USGBC Registration: •Member Registration: $300.00 •Non-Member Registration: $450.00 • Student Member Registration Scholarships Available: $50.00 (Contact USGBC for Details) •Friday Events & Awards Dinner Only: $275.00 •Friday Awards Dinner Only: $100.00 •Vendor: $500.00 (Includes Booth and (1) Admission to the Conference) Register at: http://www.cvent.com/d/z4q5n2 Lodging & Ski Tickets Discounts available upon request. Call (800) 548-4486 and mention the USGBC Annual Summit to receive discount. www.usgbcmontana.org www.usgbcmontana.org www.usgbcmontana.org www.usgbcmontana.org Speakers DYLAN HOFFMAN, TIMOTHY BRYAN LEED AP BD+C Director of Sustainability Xanterra Parks & Resorts Sustainable Design and Construction in Yellowstone National Park Dylan Hoffman is the Director of Sustainability for Xanterra Parks & Resorts’ operations in Yellowstone National Park. In this role, he oversees environmental programs for the concessionaire’s lodging, food and beverage, retail, activities, and transportation operations. Xanterra’s efforts focus on waste reduction and recycling, resource conservation, environmental compliance, sustainable design and construction, and education and interpretation for Xanterra’s 3,000 employees and 3.5 million annual park visitors. In addition to his responsibilities for Xanterra, Mr. Hoffman sits on the Board of Directors for the Wyoming chapter of USGBC and the YellowstoneTeton Clean Energy Coalition and participates in the Leadership Team for the UnCommon Sense program in business sustainability. Mr. Hoffman lives and works in Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park. Description: This seminar will provide an overview of ongoing construction projects in Yellowstone National Park as part of the Concessions Facility Improvement Program (CFIP) in the new 20year concessions contract held by Xanterra Parks & Resorts. This program and its associated projects, estimated at a total budget of $134+ million, has been structured to meet a minimum of LEED silver standards for all project elements and certify all new construction portions of the program. The presentation will highlight the two projects that are currently in construction, the Canyon Area Lodging Redevelopment (CALR) and the construction of a new employee dorm at the Old Faithful Area, both of which are utilizing modular construction techniques to address an aggressive schedule that minimizes impact on visitor experience. CTA Architects Engineers Licensed PE: Montana, Washington, Oregon Building Science Tools and Lessons for Building Healthy Green Buildings Senior Forensic Engineer/Building Science Engineer Timothy Bryan is a Senior Forensic and Building Science Engineer for CTA. Tim has over 18 years of experience in the construction industry as a forensic engineer, roofing and building enclosure specialist, project manager, construction superintendent, and carpenter. Since 2002, Tim has specialized in failure investigations and repair of enclosures for existing buildings on over 330 projects. Using his background in mechanical engineering, Tim provides clients with roof and building enclosure performance analysis and design. He also develops hygrothermal computer models of exterior wall and roof assemblies to evaluate performance and potential for moisture accumulation. When not working, Tim spends his time enjoying the farm life with his wife Jen and two girls Tessa and Jayda. Description: The lecture will include tools we use for modeling high performance wall and roof assemblies in Green Buildings and how they can avoid negative impacts to human health. The attendee should walk away with a better understanding of what tools are available, how they can help, and what to watch for when using the tools. Additionally, we will provide examples of designs that have worked and those that are challenging. The attendee should walk away with some examples of green designs that work and several that were potentially unhealthy or some complicated designs that are concerns. Our Annual Summit is planned to be the largest in our Chapter’s history. Vendor booths will be provided. Minimum of 8 AIA and LEED CEU Credits will be available. MONTANA KATH WILLIAMS, Owner CHRIS ALLEN, Owner Global Connect: A Whirlwind Tour of Sustainability Greening Our Infrastructure Kath Williams + Associates Dr. Kath Williams, past president of the World Green Building Council, has a diverse background in sustainability—from sustainability planning, new/renovation construction projects to green education through community facilitation and LEED documentation. Drawing on her experiences as assistant to the vice president of research at Montana State University, her position as executive director of MSU’s EPICenter (Green Building) project, and her service as vice chair of the U.S. Green Building Council for six years, Kath is involved in the development of outstanding green building projects around the world. Since founding Kath Williams + Associates in Bozeman in 1999, Kath has worked on over 90 LEED projects around the world including 23 in Montana. All were either new construction or LEED-Operations & Maintenance projects and included federal courthouse in Billings, Montana State Fund, and LEED-Platinum projects at University of Montana and Blackfeet Community College, as well as three LEED projects at Montana State University. Kath was honored to be serve as the first Fulbright Senior Specialist in Sustainability and to lead the team that produced the U.S. State Department’s Green Guide for Operations and Maintenance for all embassies and consulates worldwide. In 2011, Kath was named LEED Fellow, one of the first 34 designated by Green Building Certification Institute. Chris Allen + Associates Chris has twenty-five+ years of experience in project planning, development, and management services for government, NGO, and private sector clients. Trained in International Business at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas, Chris’ work has been featured in Fast Company, Crain Business Journal, Management Innovation Exchange, McCombs Business School Magazine, and Corporate Knights. He is Co-Founder of Biomimicry 3.8 and a Certified Biomimicry Professional. Chris works with strategic partners and clients to co-create the innovative technologies, practices, and business models for high-performance infrastructure and built environment projects. Chris Allen + Associates is a results-oriented business focus with proven ability to work creatively across disciplines with clients and project teams to create vision, develop strategy, assemble resources, and achieve objectives. www.chrisallenassociates.com Description: This talk will focus on the tremendous infrastructure investments required to support the world’s economy in the coming decades. Global, national, and local economies (especially built environments) depend on high-performance infrastructure yet our design and development approaches must become smarter, more resilient, and ultimately sustainable. Frameworks for sustainable infrastructure planning and development will be introduced as well as projects demonstrating emerging applications. Questions around implications for Montana’s infrastructure of the future will also be explored. 2015 U.S. Green Building Council Montana Chapter Annual Summit Health and Community MONTANA www.usgbcmontana.org Speakers SMART SCHOOLS PANEL RANDY HAFER, President High Plains Architects HEATHER HIGINBOTHAM, LEED AP BD+C Saving the Planet One Building at a Time Includes LT. GOVERNOR ANGELA MCLEAN Angela McLean, a Twin Bridges High School graduate and an Anaconda resident, became Montana’s 31st Lieutenant Governor in February, 2014 when she was appointed by Governor Steve Bullock. McLean, an educator and classroom teacher, taught American History and Government at Anaconda High School and served as an adjunct professor at Montana Tech in Butte prior to being tapped Lieutenant Governor. She also served as the Chair of the Montana Board of Regents prior to being appointed and had previously served on the Montana Board of Public Education. Angela worked through high school as a waitress at the Blue Anchor Café in Twin Bridges. She earned a bachelor’s degree in 1994 from Western Montana College in Dillon, now the University of Montana Western – becoming the first member of her family to graduate from college. She went on to earn her Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Montana in 2000 and in 2005 she became a Nationally Board Certified Teacher. After graduating from Western Montana College, McLean began her teaching career at Arlee High School and Middle School. Going Beyond the Built Environment: Regional Planning for Sustainable Future WENDY WEAVER USGBC Montana Chapter Member Wendy’s commitment to and involvement in her community are fundamental elements in her personal philosophy and work ethic. She is an active Board Member and Green School Chair of the Montana Chapter of the US Green Building Council, Co-Founder of the Gallatin Zero Waste Coalition, and Founder of Gallatin Growth Solutions. Wendy is also a Business Leader for a Clean Energy Future, Professional Mentor of MSU Engineers Without Borders, and is member of the MSU Civil Engineering Advisory Committee. In 2007, she was chosen as an engineer to participate in The Rotary Foundation Group Study Exchange Program in Peru, and is now actively involved in the Bozeman Sunrise Rotary Club. Wendy is also a licensed professional civil engineer with over 15 years of civil engineering experience in the built environment, and strongly believes in sustainable, green building and design principles. When she is not busy trying to make the world a more resilient place to live in, and teaching her community about the importance of sustainability, she is truly a Montana girl at heart. Wendy is a loving and involved mother of two children, endurance trail runner, avid page 6 chick, gardener, and snow angel designer. Randy Hafer, a native Montanan, founded High Plains Architects in Billings, Montana in 1999 after spending 18 years working at other firms in Chicago and Montana. Since then, High Plains has been a regional leader in sustainable design, historic preservation and urban revitalization. Randy has completed seven historic tax credit projects and six LEED® Platinum projects, resulting in numerous green building and preservation awards. Randy is the recipient of: the first Montana BetterBricks Award for “Architecture in 2009,” the Roche Jaune Award for Civic Leadership Excellence in 2012, and the Montana Small Business Person of the Year in 2014. Randy is a licensed architect, a LEED Accredited Professional, and a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Architecture from Stanford University and a Master of Architecture degree from Yale University. Description: There are at least four big elephants – elephants of our own creation – in the room with us. Each of these elephants – peak oil, global human population, climate change, and species extinction – is growing larger and jockeying for more space in the room. We need to find a radically different way to build and live on this planet. We need to find a way that is far less consumptive of resources, reduces then eliminates the burning of fossil fuels, and avoids damage to the environment. If we don’t, the elephants may crowd us out of the room. BOB HARRIS, Angela and her husband Mike, an attorney, returned to his hometown of Anaconda where they raise their family. They are the parents of Colin, a high school freshman, and Ellen, who’s in fifth grade. She enjoys spending time with her family, as well as skiing, bicycling, hiking and camping. FAIA, LEED Fellow www.usgbcmontana.org www.usgbcmontana.org Heather Higinbotham is the Director of Sustainability Programs for the Yellowstone Business Partnership. She has been managing the implementation and piloting of the Greater Yellowstone Framework for Sustainable Development for the past 7 years, and has been intimately involved with this project from its inception, including as a primary author and researcher on the original project proposal, chair of the Regional Recycling Infrastructure and Housing Needs Assessment advisory teams, and coordinator of the integration of the Greater Yellowstone Framework for Sustainable Development into the model code and regional planning process. Description: This seminar will provide an overview of the Western Greater Yellowstone Consortium’s three-year process to design a regional plan for sustainable development. For the past two and a half years, four adjacent counties and seven cities south and west of Yellowstone National Park have been working together as a region to plan for a more prosperous and sustainable future. Using a $1.5 million federal planning grant, these local governments are cooperating across state and country boundaries to improve the livability of each individual community and the region as a whole. The final product of the three-year grant will be a “Regional Plan for Sustainable Development” (RPSD) that will serve as a guiding, comprehensive resource for all the cities, counties and agencies involved. Bob Harris, FAIA, LEED Fellow, has established expertise in combining award winning design and sustainable practices in buildings that respect nature, enhance place, and exhibit the craft of construction. Bob is a partner at Lake|Flato Architects and has more than 25 years of project experience with a focus on environmental issues ranging from land preservation advocacy to sustainable urban design. Bob is the firm’s sustainability leader, was the Founding Director of the USGBC Balcones Chapter and formerly served on the national board of the U.S. Green Building Council. For his leadership in the fields of design and sustainability, Bob was elected to the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects in 2007 and became a Fellow with the USGBC in 2011. www.lakeflato.com Schedule FRIDAY, JANUARY 30 SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 2014 MONTANA SUSTAINABLE BUILDING AWARDS 7:00 - 7:30 Opening Session - Welcome by USGBC Montana Board - Health & Community 7:30 - 8:30 Ben Reed & Ed Gulick Topic: Making Solar Accessible: Community Solar Policy 8:30-8:45 Break/Vendors 8:45-9:45 Timothy Bryan, CTA Architects Engineers Topic: Tools and Lessons for Building Healthy Green Buildings 9:45-2:45 Lunch on your own, Skiing/Boarding Green Building Tour includes Yellowstone Club Networking with Speakers, Vendors, and other attendees 2:45-3:45 Bob Harris, Parner, Lake | Flato Topic: Nature, Beauty and Design: The Sustainable Design Imperative 3:45-3:55Break/Vendors 7:30-7:45 Coffee, Fruit, Gathering 7:45 - 8:45 Heather Higinbotham, USGBC MT Board Member Topic: Regional Planning for a Sustainable Future 8:45-9:00 Break/Vendors 9:00-10:00 Dylan Hoffman, Director of Sustainability, Xanterra Parks & Resorts Topic: Sustainable Design & Construction in Yellowstone National Park 10:00-10:15 Break/Vendors 10:15-11:15 Randy Hafer, President, High Plains Architects Topic: Saving The Planet, One Building at a Time 11:15-11:30 Break/Vendors 11:30-12:30 SMART Schools Challenge Panel with Lt. Governor, Angela McLean Topic: Saving Money and Resources Today Overview The USGBC Montana Chapter created the Montana Sustainable Building Awards to acknowledge, and celebrate the best buildings in sustainable design and construction across the state. These projects represent the finest standards in sustainability, innovation, building performance, and overall integration. The intent of the Montana Sustainable Building Awards program is to encourage excellence in sustainability and to provide an avenue through which practitioners may gain recognition by their peers and the public. The ultimate goal is to raise the standards of sustainable design excellence by both the architect, engineering & construction community and the public. 3:55-4:55 Chris Allen, Owner Chris Allen + Associates, Chris Anderson, President DJ&A Topic: Greening our Infrastructure Skiing/Boarding, Lunch on your own, Networking with Speakers, Vendors, and other attendees. Other This is for any application that does not fit in the categories listed above and could be a unique sustainable building. Products, services, or research project buildings. 4:55-5:00 Break/Vendors 5:00-6:00 Kath Williams, Owner Kath Williams + Associates Topic: Global Connect: A Whirlwind Tour of Sustainability 6:15-7:00 Mix & Mingle Cocktails 7:00pm-?? Dinner, Jason McLennan, Keynote Speaker, Building Awards Health and Community Criteria Each submission is judged on the success the project has achieved on its individual requirements and how it implements and advances sustainable techniques and standards. Submissions are evaluated individually, not in competition with each other. The Jury uses the anonymous written and visual material submitted for its analysis. It is imperative that this information describe the project as clearly and accurately as possible. Jury considerations will be based on LEED and sustainable principals including but not limited to; economy, environmental harmony, sustainability, energy saving, conservation, water use strategies, building & material use/reuse, aesthetic, creativity, craftsmanship, and innovation. Categories Submissions should clearly demonstrate process and accomplishment through a combination of text, diagrams, drawings, photographs, and other graphic materials and address the issues outlined in the Jury Criteria. Submissions should fall within the following categories: Residential New construction and renovation of private residence, spec home, or production home with sustainable strategies applied during construction or renovation. Multiple dwelling units, such as apartment complexes, condominiums, townhomes, dorm, etc. are eligible. Commercial New construction and renovations of business building or tenant finish. Commercial, institution, banks, hospitals, schools, government, office buildings, etc. are eligible. Visit the following link to learn more: http://www.usgbcmontana.org/2014-montana-sustainable-building-awards.html 2015 U.S. Green Building Council Montana Chapter Annual Summit Health and Community MONTANA www.usgbcmontana.org
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