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Test your basic knowledge |
LEED GA: Green Associate
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
certifications
,
leed
,
construction
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A system where the output may signal the system to stop changing - i.e. - a thermostat -- at a certain point the temp feedback will tell the system to cut off
Adaptive Plant
Negative Feedback Loop
To prioritize the relative impact of credits on GHG emissions
The average marginal cost is less than 2%. In addition. it reduces use - consumption - cost - & liability.
2. In LEED credit weightings - the most important impact category
Renewable Energy
Climate Change
LEED Requirements and Submittals
40%
3. The portion of the project site submitted for LEED certification. for multiple building developments - the LEED project boundary may be a portion of the development as determined by the project team
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
Wet Pond (retention pond)
Waste Stream Audit
LEED Project Boundary
4. An international treaty designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of numerous substances believed to be responsible for ozone depletion
Process Water
Global Warming
Montreal Protocol
Credit Interpretation Request
5. Landscaping and gardening in ways that reduce or eliminate the need for supplemental irrigation. it is promoted in areas that do not have easily accessible supplies of fresh water and is catching on in other areas as climate patterns shift
Xeriscaping
The % of occupants who have direct control over tempt - airflow - & lighting in their spaces.
% of total land are that does not allow moisture penetration
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
6. Human thermal comfort is defined by ASHRAE as the state of mind that expresses satisfaction with the surrounding environment (ASHRAE Standard 55). maintaining thermal comfort for occupants of buildings or other enclosures is one of the important goal
Graywater (Greywater)
Thermal Comfort
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
Square Footage of a Building
7. Floor area of the building / the total area of the site = sq ft / acre
Building Density
Extra categories for LEED for Neighborhood Development
LEED Requirements and Submittals
MERV or Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value
8. Properties or patterns that a complex system has - but which the individual members do not have. the end result is that the system now has more than just the sum of its parts. for example - saltiness is a property that neither sodium or chlorine have
Commissioning
Emergent Properties
Life Cycle Costing (LCC)
Building Density
9. What's the earliest pt at which a LEED for Schools proejct can be cert?
Open Grid Pavement
After bldg completion & once all submittals & clarifications are reviewed.
Regional Material
Erosion
10. Certified (40-49) - Silver (50-59) - Gold (60-79) - and Platinum (80+)
250 square ft
Nonpoint-source pollution
The four LEED levels
70%
11. Part of the LEED rating system. projects earn points by meeting the requirements of optional credits in order to earn points towards certification
LEED Project Boundary
Diversity of Uses
LEED Credit
Indoor Environmental Quality
12. A survey of building occupants that asks questions about the green cleaning program and helps determine if occupants are exposed to pollutants
Custodial Effectiveness Assessments
Heat Islands
Emergent Properties
Mass Transit
13. Long term maintenance of ecosystem components and functions for future generations
Environmental Sustainability
Carbon Neutrality
Sulfur dioxide & Nitrogen oxide
Waste Diversion
14. Ruling process for project applicants seeking technical and administrative guidance on how LEED credits apply to their projects and vice versa. (USGBC) LEED interpretations are the result of a CIR and may determine how future project teams use LEED
LEED Credit Interpretation Ruling (CIR)
Evapotranspiration
Low Impact Development
Biofuel
15. Major Players in Design & Construction Process are...
Metering
Location & Linkages. Awareness & Education
LEED Prerequisites
Project owner - Architect - Engineers - Commissioning authority - General Contractor - Facilities staff - Building users.
16. The min' floor area for CI
Systems Thinking
Economic prosperity - environmental stewardship - & social responsibility.
HCFC
250 square ft
17. Any substance in air that could - in high enough concentration - harm man - other animals - vegetation - or material (EPA)
Airborne Pollutant
Development Density
Integrated Process
Renewable Energy
18. A collection of living things and the environment in which they live. for example - a prairie [this] includes coyotes - the rabbits on which they feed - and the grasses that feed the rabbits
Innovation in Design & Regional Priority has 100 with 10 bonus points. Leed for home has 125.
Installing submeters & using ENERGY STAR certified cloths washers
Ecosystem
Process Water
19. Schematic Design - Design Development - and Construction Documents
Acid Rain
Flush-Out
Design
Thermal Comfort
20. American society of heating - refrigerating and air conditioning engineers. international technical society for all individuals and organizations interested in heating - ventilation - air-conditioning and refrigeration (hvac & r)
Chiller
Composite Wood (engineered lumber)
ASHRAE (ash-ray)
Integrated Process
21. Building design that takes advantage of the local climate to provide some or all of the heating - cooling - lighting and ventilation needs of the occupants
Passive Design
Acid Rain
Transportation - Site selection - Site design & management - & Stormwater management
Potable Water
22. Total square footage of buildings in a particular area divided by acre amount of the same area - expressed as SF/Acre - for example 20 -000 SF per acre
Development Density
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
Construction Administration
Install submeters & Select local plants
23. Products made from agricultural fiber such as wheat board and straw board
Agrifiber Product
Chiller
Stormwater Runoff
Value Engineering
24. Evaluation of the total cost of a building or product over its useful life - including initial - maintenance - repair and replacement costs as well as savings. LCC evaluates economic performance.
Predesign
Bioswale
Nonpoint-source pollution
Life Cycle Costing (LCC)
25. A natural resource that cannot be produced - re-grown - regenerated - or reused on a scale which can sustain its consumption rate. these resources often exist in a fixed amount - or are consumed much faster than nature can recreate them. fossil fuels
Non-renewable Resource
To qualify for Minimum Program Requirements
Construction Waste Management Plan
Regenerative
26. How prerequisites and credits are grouped depending on the building type and rating system
Agrifiber Product
Energy Efficient
LEED Category
Irrigation Efficiency
27. Drinking water that is of sufficiently high quality so that it can be consumed or utilized without risk of immediate of long term harm
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
LEED Points
Ambient Temperature
Potable Water
28. What constitutes the largest use of energy in bldg in US? What is the 2nd?
LEED Credit Checklist
Biodiversity
Floor-To-Area
Space heating (38%). Lighting (20%)
29. 4 key issues that help define how location affect project
Transportation - Site selection - Site design & management - & Stormwater management
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Process Water
The four LEED levels
30. The process of collecting (commonly from a roof) - storing and using rainwater
Foot Candle - A ftcandle is equal to 1-lumen/sq-ft
Rainwater Harvesting
Credit Interpretation Request
LEED Credit Checklist
31. The act of having separate stakeholders or designers work together to ensure the project is benefiting from synergy which allows for greater levels of sustainability throughout the project's life
Nonpoint Source Pollution
Integrated Process
Adaptive Plant
Carbon Neutrality
32. Waste building materials - dredging materials - tree stumps - and rubble resulting from [first word] - remodeling - repair - and [second word] of homes - commercial buildings and other structures and pavements
Carbon Footprint
General requirement for LEED certification documentation
Construction and Demolition Debris
Environmentally Preferable Products
33. Substances used to transfer heat during the mechanical cooling process within air conditioning and refrigerator systems. they act as the heat carrier which changes from gas to liquid and then back to gas in the refrigeration cycle
Refrigerant
Design
Greenfield
Transportation Demand Management
34. Any of various halocarbon compounds consisting of carbon - hydrogen - chlorine - and fluorine - once used widely as aerosol propellants and refrigerants. these are believed to cause depletion of the atmospheric ozone layer
Passive Design
Pollutant
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Mass Transit
35. Part of construction waste management plan
Underground Parking
Sick Building Syndrome
Waste Management Plan
Xeriscaping
36. Administrative and procedural requirements for salvaging - recycling and disposing of non-hazardous demolition and [first phrase] -- this means it should cover waste sent to a landfill - salvaging - and recycled waste
Integrated Design
LEED Intent
Construction Waste Management Plan
LEED
37. System or process for controlling the temperature - humidity - and sometimes the purity of the air in an interior space (office - warehouse - residence)
Gallons per Flush & Gallons per Minute
Brownfields
Ecosystem
Air Conditioning
38. Flush-Out
Cooling Tower
Major Construction Phases
The operation of mechanical systems for a minimum of 2 wks using 100% outdoor air at the end of construction & prior to bldg occupancy to ensure safe indoor air quality.
Built Environment
39. Begins the process of spatial refinement & usually involves the 1st design of a project's energy system.
Emissivity (of a material)
Design Development
LEED Credit
Energy Efficient
40. Capable of being decomposed by natural agents - especially bacteria
Carbon Neutrality
Biodegradable
Baseline Building Performance
Transportation - Site selection - Site design & management - & Stormwater management
41. The percentage of waste materials diverted from traditional disposal such as landfilling or incineration to be recycled - composted or reused (EPA)
Contaminant
Diversion Rate
Conventional Irrigation
Integrated Process
42. Excel spreadsheet that helps project teams track their credits against requirements for certification
HCFC
Hard Cost
LEED Online
LEED Credit Checklist
43. Process water can be reduced by which 2 methods?
Mostly environmental impacts & human benefits
LEED Requirements and Submittals
Dry Pond (detention ponds)
Installing submeters & using ENERGY STAR certified cloths washers
44. Different term from adaptive reuse because materials are reused in a way that is the same of similar to how it was used before - i.e. saving doors in an old project to be used as doors in the new project. in LEED - this material is calculated as a pe
Externality
On-Site Wastewater Treatment
Byproduct
Material Reuse
45. When all recyclables for collection are mixed but kept separate from other waste
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
70%
Baseline Building Performance
Commingled Recycling
46. Process for project teams to obtain technical guidance on how LEED requirements pertain to their projects
Climate Change
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
Custodial Effectiveness Assessments
Regional Material
47. A quantity between a site and the surrounding [area]. it is measured by pedestrian access to housing basic services such as restaurants - post offices - hospitals - libraries - etc.
Sustainable Forestry
Per-Consumer Content
Harvested Rainwater
Community Connectivity
48. Compounds that have a high vapor pressure and low water solubility and therefore can enter the air easily. many VOCs are human-made chemicals that are used and produced in the manufacture of paints - pharmaceuticals - and refrigerants
Volatile Organic Compound
Climate Change
Charrette (shuh-ret)
Environmental Sustainability
49. Energy generated from natural resources - such as sunlight - wind - tides and geothermal heat - which are naturally replenished
LEED Online
ASHRAE (ash-ray)
Renewable Energy
Portable water uses
50. A term used in the US to describe the heating or cooling capacity of a system or fuels. this is understood to represent [this]'s per hour when referring to power. this derives its measurement from the amount of energy it takes to raise the temperatur
British Thermal Unit (BTU)
Thermal Comfort
Off-Gassing (outgassing)
Environmentally Preferable Products