Archive for LEED EB

Why GREEN CUISINE is my DBA

           I joke that I have a very tight karma due to all the “coincidences” I don’t readily perceive for a long time. Now that I have turned 50, I better understand why the “apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”.  For a start, I was born in Hospital Auxulio Mutuo (Hospital of Mutual Help) and grew up in Isla Verde (Green Island), Puerto Rico.  According to my various horoscopes: I am a “Rooster” in Chinese, a “Chain” in Arabic, a “Raven” in the Native American, a “Traveler” in African and a “Libra” in the West. From the day I was born, I inherited the grape vine as my sacred “tree”, green as my cosmic color (addressed by the heart chakra), Venus as my sacred planet and the elephant as my spirit animal. Naturally, the first time my family each officially picked their favorite colors (ask them…I swear its true), my father chose “red”; my mother, “yellow”, my sister, “pink” and, I chose “green”. At that tender age, I was totally oblivious to the butterfly effect this would cause on the chain of events linking “Green Cuisine”, the holistic umbrella for all of the projects I cook up. 

     Searching for my earliest memory, I recall precisely the first time I “cooked” and spilt blood for love. It happened when I was 3, the same afternoon my mom was giving birth to my sister in the hospital and I was at home alone with my father. While he was in the garage building a boat, I was inside, unsupervised. Knowing full well I was strictly prohibited to touch knives, I took the unusual opportunity to harvest fresh limes in the garden and make nectar. Long story short, I concocted the limeade, cut myself in the process, bandaged my wound without crying and delivered a sticky glass of pure bliss and abandon to my father (who promptly fainted at the sight of my blood). It was a memorable day for us all.  

         My mother (and her mother and her grandmother) were all comforting cooks who made soups from scratch and baked homemade pies for dessert. My mom followed James Beard recipes from his Fireside Cookbook and we always ate fresh foods including a salad. When I got my own Betty Crocker cookbook at age 7, I took to preparing a carefully planned dinner each week. And so I evolved, experimenting with every flavor in the spice rack, asking for electric beaters and omelette pans for birthdays, reading cookbooks like novels, whipping up feasts without blinking and thinking there was no better way to understand the world but through F&B (Food & Beverage) eyes. After high school, I attending a semester preparing classic French cuisine at the Cordon Bleu Cooking School in Paris followed by the coldest winters of my entire life at Cornell’s School of Hotel Administration where I prepared myself for a career in Hospitality and Service (“Life IS Service”, according to Cornell).          

       Over most of my professional life, I have prepped in kitchens, managed restaurants, directed F&B departments, taught cooking and wine classes, catered parties, sold wine, stomped grapes, grown gardens, published F&B articles & newsletters & magazines & calendars, food styled videos, organized fund raising food & wine festivals, cooked for charity and traveled the world studying wine harvests and rainforest medicinal herbs. As this blog evolves, I will include various F& B stories and diaries (some previously published and others not) of my adventures tying my GREEN CUISINE DBA and karma together.            

      In a cruel twist of fate, I was asked to leave hospitality for a time for a new career in “JAN SAN” (short for Janitorial & Sanitary Supplies). Like Cinderella after midnight, I abruptly found myself in a wet smelly bathroom counting toilets and studying trash bins whereas a few months prior, I had been uncorking a fruity Rossesse wine and growing artichokes on the Italian Riviera. Attempting to make lemonade out of a sour scenario, I joked that I was flushing out my resume with the addition of another dimension in to Green Cuisine for if you are what you eat, you also **** what you eat and I supplied the Greenest toilet tissue in town. 

      As the Zen saying goes, “You don’t know what you don’t know,” and I knew squat. Soon, I was learning a new language of abbreviations for Indoor Air Quality (IAQ), Sick Building Syndrome (SBS) and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). I discovered that Puerto Ricans have the highest rate of asthma in America making MAY the official “Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month” on the island. Once I got a bigger picture, I became an advocate for “Green Cleaning” using the T.E.A.M approach (Toss the toxicity, Economize on Energy, Appreciate the Atmosphere and Master your Materials) for Environmental Management Systems (EMS) following Environmentally Preferable Purchasing (EPP).          

      As defined by Executive Order #13101 signed by Clinton in 1998,  an “environmentally preferable” product or service is: “One that has a lesser or reduced effect on human health and the environment when compared to a similar product or service used for the same purpose”.           

     EPP is an informed way to make a better buy. Between two paints, EPP chooses the odor-free version with no VOCs to avoid chocking fumes. Between two vacuums, EPP chooses a high efficiency particular air (HEPA) filter to eliminate swirling dust. Between two toilet papers, EPP chooses the processed chlorine free (PCF) tissue made from 100% recycled pulp with post-consumer waste (PCW) over a cuddly white brand which is marketed as “soft” but which  brutally clear-cuts ancient forests in secret. To keep it simple, EPP recommends “Green Seal certified” products because they meet strict sustainable specifications for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). EPP is a healthier and safer way to spend your money when you have a choice which “costs” about the same (or just a wee bit more because “you are worth it”).         

       In karmic terms, nothing happens without a reason still, it was painful when my position was “eliminated” and I was swept aside like dirt. Now I crow what I know (and keep learning) concerning even deeper shades of GREEN in what we drive, where we go, what we eat, how we clean, what we buy, how we live and where we throw our “garbage” away. I am now involved with Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) helping Green businesses make real profits without costing the world in the future. It all comes around in the end.

Comments (1) »

Leading the Way

The other day, Luis Fortuño spoke to SJ Rotary about his economic plans for Energy when he is elected Governor of Puerto Rico. Several members of the audience later told me they were watching my face as he spoke. Granted, I am a lousy poker player, so I imagine I was beaming! His speech was a Sustainability-in-Business presentation through and through and gloriously GREEN. He said a lot of spot-on things about renewable energy sources (sun and wind) and recycling and still more on how  “he’d act by example”. In other words, he noted that our local Government is the largest consumer of Energy on the island and he was going to start there first- by making it more efficient through  LEED. I wondered if everyone knew what he meant.  

Unfortunately, commercial Buildings are notoriously inefficient. Statistics compiled by the United States Green Building Council (USGBC), a non-profit organization founded in 1993, show that American (and Puerto Rican) buildings consume 40% of the total energy. [5% is consumed during the building’s construction; 83% is consumed during its lifetime!] Buildings suck up 62% of the electricity and guzzle 12% of the drinking water while producing TONS of garbage and 30% of total Greenhouse Gas [GHG]) or CO² emissions. Indeed, inefficient buildings are more to blame for Global Warming than cars!  

LEED stands for “Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design” and is the defacto GREEN standard for High Performance Buildings developed by the USGBC. The LEED system rates buildings by points achieved through implementing and documenting sustainable choices in 6 areas including: sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, indoor environmental air quality, material selection and innovation. The rating system covers design and New Construction (LEED NC) and well as Operations and Maintenance of Existing Buildings (LEED EB) and others. LEED establishes a common measurable yardstick for healthy, efficient and cost saving practices and GREEN buildings don’t have to be new. Statistics show that the Existing Building (EB) market is 80 times larger than the New Construction (NC) market and its potential for energy and water savings is enormous. A 2006 USGBC study found that by retrofitting older buildings with GREEN changes, owners saved (on average) $.90/ft² annually in energy and other costs and paid back their investment in 2-2½ years. Converting Existing Buildings to High performance GREEN buildings promises to have a huge impact on Global Warming. 

Today, the USGBC, based in Washington DC, has 7,500+ members and 75+ local chapters including one in the Caribbean, based in Puerto Rico. Spearheaded by Architect Fernando Abuñas in 2005, the local chapter is continuous evolving and now meets the first Thursday of each month in the School of Architecture on the UPR Santurce campus. The chapter, however,  is very diversified and welcomes engineers, builders, interior designers, landscape designers, energy consultants, real estate planners, commissioning providers, environmentalists and Green Business Strategists (such as myself) in addition to practicing architects and emerging Green builders (students). Locally, the Chapter has already hosted numerous learning seminars as well as its 1ST Symposium on Green Building and Annual Assembly on Dec. 7, 2007 at the PR Convention Center. Bill Weinaug, a USGBC member- mechanical engineer and Convention’s opening speaker-referred to Carbon Neutral Caribbean as a huge opportunity in sustainable luxury living.  Currently involved in 20 GREEN projects throughout the islands, he summed up his strategy as a combination of Good Design (the right thing to do), Good Value (good payback) and Good Ideas (involving a plethora of New Technology). He commented that every minute enough energy reaches the Earth from the Sun to meet the World’s energy demands for one year…and that the Caribbean is a prime spot for sustainably harvesting energy from the sun, wind and deep sea. 

This weekend, (March 14-15, 2008), the Green Building Trade Show and Conference Corporation (GBTS), will also be hosting it’s first FERIA VERDE at the Puerto Rico Convention Center. Both Free and open to the public from 9 AM to 5 P.M., it promises to be a showcase for ecologically friendly product and service providers involved in the local sustainability movement. As far as I know, this is the first time all the major GREEN players on the island will be under the same roof and available for questions and answers! I can’t wait to see what Green Solutions are available here.

Leave a comment »