New whitepaper: Green Buildings and the Bottom Line
Green building’s early adherents have proven that they can build high-quality, high-performance structures in a professional, businesslike way. Their passion has not diminished, but it has become more firmly grounded in the realities of the marketplace.
This “new reality” has begun to attract the attention of the financial community. Investors are asking: Do green buildings command premium rents? Do they lease up faster than “conventional” buildings? Are they more valuable than other real estate investments? What is the market potential for green buildings in the future?
In the following pages, we will examine the bottom-line issues of green building across a wide range of building types.
Full Article (via Jetson Green)
Jade Nascimento said,
July 27, 2008 @ 8:19 pm
Great work!
Atlanta Maid Service said,
January 18, 2009 @ 11:29 am
In parts of the country that are very conservative, we are seeing some demand for a partial system like hot water heating. It costs maybe 5-6K to put in and pays for itself in about 7 years. That is the best we can hope for right now, the larger systems just aren’t getting any footing yet.