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New HLS Student Center Takes the LEED

LEED, or the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, is an internationally recognized rating system developed by the U.S. Green Building Council that grants four levels of sustainability certification—Certified, Silver, Gold, and Platinum.

WCC, which is currently under review, is expected to earn a Gold certification.

The Law School did not aim for Platinum certification, Cosgrove says, due to cost and the trade-off between additional sustainable features and user friendliness.

For example, Cosgrove said that rather than fitting the courtyard space with layers of solar panels in order to earn additional points, the Law School opted to make the lawn an enjoyable social space instead.

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Harvard currently has 64 projects certified by LEED and 95 projects that are LEED registered and currently being processed for certification. A renovated suite of offices in the Law School’s Griswold Hall was the first LEED Platinum Commercial Interior Space in New England and the first among American universities. It is one of less than 20 projects in the world that have ever earned this title.

Cosgrove says that architects may adopt some of WCC’s new features—such as low-energy light bulbs—in other Harvard buildings if it makes “economic sense.”

While the sustainable bulbs may be more expensive up-front, Cosgrove says this kind of cost-benefit analysis is taken into account for LEED certification.

Law School Green Living Representative Laura B. Wolf echoes this sentiment.

“Some people look at the [WCC] and think it’s a huge waste of money,” she says. “But I think that when you build something green and well, it is a smart investment because it pays you back.”

The project has less expected benefits beyond its environmental and economic profile.

“One of my favorite things is that [WCC] does not smell like a new building because they use good materials that do not have chemicals in them,” Wolf says.

Green Living Representative David M. Jochnowitz says he appreciated changes as simple as trading old, bolted windows for openable ones that make it possible to regulate temperature.

“[HLS] took a lot of things into consideration, some of which were remarkably simple,” he says. “Little, obvious things can make it a better place.”

—Staff Writer Juliet R. Bailin can be reached at jbailin@college.harvard.edu.

—Staff writer Alyza J. Sebenius can be reached at asebenius@college.harvard.edu.

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