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<br />Sustainable Buildings Policy <br />For Buildings Owned and Occupied by the City <br /> <br />Purpose <br />The purpose of a Citywide policy on sustainable buildings is to demonstrate the City of Eugene's com- <br />mitment to environmental, economic, and social stewardship, to yield cost savings to the City's taxpayers <br />through reduced operating costs, to provide healthy work environments for staff and visitors, and to con- <br />tribute to the City's goals of protecting, conserving, and enhancing the region's environmental resources. <br />Additionally, the City is in a position to set a community standard of sustainable buildings practices. <br /> <br />Policy <br /> <br />1. The City of Eugene shall incorporate principles of sustainability in the planning. financing. siting. <br />design. construction. operation. and maintenance of buildings owned and occupied by the City and <br />associated facilities. <br /> <br />a. All City of Eugene buildings and facilities should use the U.S. Green Building Council's <br />LEEDâ„¢ Green Building Rating System for Existing Buildings (LEED-EB) as a guide for the <br />sustainable operation and maintenance of City buildings. Implementing LEED- EB criteria on an <br />inventory-wide basis is intended to maximize sustainability benefits within existing resources, <br />and provide a means of benchmarking environmental and financial performance improvements <br />in City practices. Certification of existing buildings under LEED-EB will be evaluated for tech- <br />nical and economic feasibility and pursued at the highest feasible level of certification on a case- <br />by-case basis as funding is available. <br /> <br />b. All new construction and additions encompassing 10,000 gross square feet or more of building <br />area should achieve a Silver certification level of the U.S. Green Building Council's LEEDâ„¢ <br />Green Building Rating System for New Construction (LEED-NC). A higher equivalent rating <br />(Gold or Platinum) should be sought where practicable as funding is available. <br /> <br />c. New construction encompassing less than 10,000 gross square feet of building area should <br />achieve the equivalent of at least a LEED Silver certification level where technically feasible. <br />Projects of any size for which certification is not feasible due to technical reasons, should use <br />LEED-NC as a guide to incorporate as many sustainable features as economically feasible. <br /> <br />d. Building renovation projects should use LEED-NC as a guide and will be evaluated for certifica- <br />tion on a case-by-case basis, as the feasibility of incorporating sustainable features within the <br />context of the existing building will vary widely from project to project. <br /> <br />2. It is City policy that sustainability elements should be considered part of the standard costs of building. <br />renovating. and -preserving public assets. One of the goals adopted by the City Council is that ongoing <br />financial resources will be adequate to maintain and deliver municipal services, including funding for <br />the planning, siting, design, construction, maintenance, and operation of City buildings and associated <br />facilities. Budgeting for new construction, renovations and additions to City facilities should include <br />the costs of incorporating sustainable features and achieving certification goals. <br /> <br />3. Implementing LEED criteria and achievin~ certification will be at the highest level technically and <br />economically feasible. The feasibility of incorporating sustainable features and achieving LEED certi- <br />fications will be based on whether criteria can technically be implemented, and where there is a net <br /> <br />Exhibit A to Resolution No. 4884 <br />