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Canadian LEED Projects Eclipse 1 Billion Square Feet

Feb. 1, 2017

The widespread adoption of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building certification program by Canada’s industry, contributes to innovation and economic development for the industry as a whole. 

LEED has reached a significant milestone in Canada. The Canada Green Building Council (CaGBC) has announced there are now over 1 billion square feet of LEED-registered projects in Canada, furthering the cause for green buildings and increased efficiency in facilities.

The square footage entails 7,000 LEED buildings, homes and communities since 2004. The successful and widespread adoption of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building certification program by Canada’s industry, contributes to innovation and economic development for the industry as a whole. 

As the world moves toward a low-carbon economy, CaGBC is pushing higher standards for the performance of buildings (both new and existing) through LEED v4. It is also moving ahead with plans to support the industry by providing Canada’s first state-of-the-art guideline and third-party verification for zero carbon buildings. In addition, it is expanding research and consultations on existing buildings to determine how Canada’s infrastructure can be better managed and retrofitted — both to stimulate job growth and reduce GHG emissions.

Overall LEED numbers in 2016 show growing impact across the country

In a preview of what is to come, LEED’s end-of-year totals for 2016 were strong overall, with a total of 406 LEED projects certified between January 1 and December 31, 2016, says CaGBC. This brings the grand total of certified projects in Canada to 2,990.

Final totals by LEED certification level for 2016 were:

  • 70 LEED Certified
  • 154 LEED Silver
  • 152 LEED Gold
  • 30 LEED Platinum

The top five *provinces for LEED certification across Canada in 2016 (yearly total, not cumulative) were:

  • Ontario – 147
  • Quebec – 103
  • British Columbia – 62
  • Alberta – 61
  • Manitoba – 10

In addition to hitting 1 billion sq. ft. in LEED-registered space, other notable progress in 2016 included:

  • 270 Albert Street in Ottawa became the first commercial project in Canada to earn a LEED v4 Gold certification in the Existing Buildings category in November 2016. Managed by Blackwood Partners, the team on this project was able to improve the building’s energy performance by 25 percent using LEED, resulting in (among other things) an ENERGY STAR score that placed the building in the 91st percentile amongst its peers.
  • In the first quarter of 2016, Canadian LEED-certified projects reached a cumulative reduction of over 1 million tonnes of CO2e in greenhouse gas emissions — the equivalent of taking 238,377 cars off the road for a year.
  • LEED Gold certified projects also surpassed 1000 in the first quarter of 2016. LEED Gold makes up 42 percent of all LEED certified projects in Canada — the highest percentage of all levels.
  • The TD Bank Group office in Toronto earned the first WELL v1 certification in the world, with its renovation of 25,000 sq. ft. of corporate office space.
  • Canada was named as a top country (#2) for LEED projects internationally by the USGBC for the third year in a row.
  • CaGBC named the Career and Technology Centre at Lord Shaughnessy High School in Calgary as the Greenest School in Canada for 2016, for its environmental curriculum and programs that encourage students to think more innovatively.

As the Canadian government plans for the implementation of the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change  — which recognizes the building sector as an area critical to the reduction of emissions — the building industry’s widespread LEED experience will be crucial to its success, notes CaGBC.

The rise of green building and its influence on climate policy in Canada is also detailed in an update to the LEED in Motion: Canada report from the U.S. Green Building Council that includes key highlights on CaGBC’s progress in advocating for green buildings in 2016. For ongoing updates on LEED in Canada, visit CaGBC’s LEED website.

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