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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. What should take place during Occupancy?
Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)
Periodic maintenance must occur. Recommissioning along with occupant surveying (via post-occupancy evaluation) at regular interval.
Stormwater Runoff
Systems Thinking
2. The number of different types of space per acre in an area - think of a mixed-use development - which has both houses and offices
Previously Developed Site
Diversity of Uses
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
Reuse
3. 4 key issues that help define how location affect project
Carpool
Systems Thinking
Transportation - Site selection - Site design & management - & Stormwater management
Portable water uses
4. Green Bldg can reduce how much Solid Waste?
70%
Commissioning
Integrative
LEED NC&MR
5. Any method of powering an engine that does not involve solely petroleum (e.g. electric car - petrol-electric hybrid - solar powered)
Regional Material
Space heating (38%). Lighting (20%)
Submeter
Alternative Fuel Vehicle
6. Total building energy costs (including all plug loads) annually. this value is intended to be used to compare against design cases to compute energy savings from a proposed design
Baseline Building Performance
Integrated Design
Open Grid Pavement
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
7. A process used to remove VOCs from a bldg by elevating the tempt in the fully furnished & ventilated bldg prior to human occupancy.
Construction and Demolition Debris
Solar Reflectance Index (SRI)
Bake-Out
Underground Parking
8. The presence in water of enough harmful or objectionable material to damage the water's quality (EPA)
Transportation - Site selection - Site design & management - & Stormwater management
General requirement for LEED certification documentation
Water Pollution
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
9. A LEED rating is achieved through earning points in each of the 6 LEED categories
LEED Prerequisites
LEED Points
Daylighting
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
10. Part of the LEED rating system. projects earn points by meeting the requirements of optional credits in order to earn points towards certification
Commingled Recycling
Retrocommissioning
Off-Gassing (outgassing)
LEED Credit
11. The ability of dark - non-reflective paved areas-city streets - rooftops - and sidewalks-to absorb and radiate heat - making urban areas and the surrounding suburbs noticeably hotter than rural towns nearby. other contributors include reduced airflow
Heat Island Effect
Value Engineering
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.
Alternative Fuel Vehicle
12. Controllability of Systems
Ambient Temperature
Humidity - Air speed - and Tempt
Soft Cost
The % of occupants who have direct control over tempt - airflow - & lighting in their spaces.
13. A contractual benchmark that usually corresponds to the point at which a client could occupy a nearly completed space.
Substantial completion
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Closed System
Montreal Protocol
14. The process of collecting (commonly from a roof) - storing and using rainwater
LEED Points
Rainwater Harvesting
5 years
Greenfield
15. Energy generated from natural resources - such as sunlight - wind - tides and geothermal heat - which are naturally replenished
Renewable Energy
Triple Bottom Line
Review credit intent & self-evaluate - Review past CIR - and Consult LEED reference guide
Built Environment
16. The concept that takes into consideration all impacts of the indoor environment on human health and performance - including indoor air quality - daylighting and views - and visual and thermal comfort.
Regenerative
Indoor Environmental Quality
Ozone (O3)
Building Commissioning
17. 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
Green Power
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
Refrigerant
Raingarden
18. In LEED credit weightings - the most important impact category
Climate Change
Carbon Footprint
Graywater (Greywater)
Aquifer
19. 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
Development Density
Passive Design
Heat Islands
% of water delivered by irrigation equipment that is actually used for irrigation & not evaporate/blowaway/fall on hardscape
20. The area of the project site that is impacted by construction activity - LEED project should attempt to limit site disturbance
Baseline Building Performance
To prioritize the relative impact of credits on GHG emissions
Site Disturbance
Hybrid Vehicle
21. Hydrochlorofluorocarbons that are used in refrigerants and propellants that are known to deplete the ozone layer
Indoor Air Quality
HCFC
Building Density
Waste Stream Audit
22. 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
Cradle to Cradle
Greenfield
Negative Feedback Loop
Nested System
23. Capable of being decomposed by natural agents - especially bacteria
Biodegradable
Hardscape
Bake-Out
Stormwater Runoff
24. Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs (EPA)
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.
Sustainable
Volatile Organic Compound
Waterless Urinal
25. Water that is not treated to drinking water standards and is not meant for human consumption
Non-Potable Water
Emissivity (of a material)
Rating system and Project size
Open System
26. The use of technology that requires less energy to perform the same function. a compact fluorescent light bulb that uses less energy than an incandescent bulb to produce the same amount of light is an example. the decision to replace an incandescent
Energy Efficient
Major Construction Phases
Energy Use Intensity (EUI)
Certificate of occupancy
27. 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
Raingarden
Externality
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
Thermal Comfort
28. Excessive or obtrusive artificial light that obscures the stars in the night sky for city dwellers - interferes with astronomical observatories - and like any other form of pollution - disrupts ecosystems and has adverse health effects
Light Pollution
Adaptive Reuse
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
Installing submeters & using ENERGY STAR certified cloths washers
29. A review of consumables waste of a project. essentially - finding out what makes up the projects waste can help determine ways to increase recycling or reduce waste through other methods
Rapidly Renewable Materials
Waste Stream Audit
Community Connectivity
Bypass otherwise required submittals
30. An unwanted airborne constituent that may reduce acceptability of the air (ASHRAE 62.1-2004)
Contaminant
% of water delivered by irrigation equipment that is actually used for irrigation & not evaporate/blowaway/fall on hardscape
Indoor Environmental Quality Management Plan
Diversion Rate
31. 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
Building Commissioning
Construction Waste Management Plan
Humidity - Air speed - and Tempt
Acidification
32. Mainly artificial structures--such as pavements (roads - sidewalks - driveways and parking lots) that are covered by impenetrable (impervious) materials such as asphalt - concrete - brick - and stone--and rooftops. soils compacted by urban developmen
Impervious Surfaces
Imperviousness
Baseline Building Performance
Greenhouse Gases
33. A gas composed of 3 oxygen atoms. it's not usually emitted directly into the air - but at ground level is created by a chemical reaction between oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the presence of sunlight. ozone has the
Externality
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Ozone (O3)
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.
34. Light that passes beyond the project boundary - i.e. parking lot lighting that passes into a park next to the project
ASHRAE (ash-ray)
Light Trespass
Bioswale
Construction Documents
35. Green Bldg can reduce how much CO2 Emissions?
Community Connectivity
On-Site Wastewater Treatment
33%-39%
To qualify for Minimum Program Requirements
36. An expanded baseline for measuring performance - adding social and environmental dimensions to the traditional profit measure - so decisions are viewed in the long term with their impact on people - the planet - and profit
Triple Bottom Line
Infill Development
Emergent Properties
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
37. The variation in life forms within a given ecosystem or for the entire earth. this is often used as a measure of the health of biological systems.
Biodiversity
Harvested Rainwater
Negative Feedback Loop
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
38. 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
Off-Gassing (outgassing)
Construction and Demolition Debris
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.
After bldg completion & once all submittals & clarifications are reviewed.
39. A measure of the amount of illumination falling on a surface.
Wastewater
Building Density
Foot Candle - A ftcandle is equal to 1-lumen/sq-ft
Green Washing
40. A term used in life cycle analysis to describe a material or product that is recycled into a new product at the end of its useful life. an example of a closed system
Commissioning Report
Cradle to Cradle
Aquifer
Schematic Design
41. 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
Feedback Loop
LEED Online
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
42. Any behavior that results in the use of less energy. examples: turning the lights off when you leave a room - and recycling aluminum cans are both ways to do this
Energy Efficient
Waste Stream Audit
Energy Conservation
Built Environment
43. A hydrocarbon deposit - such as petroleum - coal or natural gas - derived from the accumulated remains of ancient plants and animals and used as fuel. carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases generated by burning these are considered to be one of th
Pedestrian Access
Green Cleaning
Brownfields
Fossil Fuels
44. The rate at which indoor air enters and leaves a building - usually expressed in LEED as the number of changes of outdoor air per hour (air changes per hour or "ach") ASHRAE 62 prescribes proper ventilation rates to ensure pollutants and carbon dioxi
Potable Water
Ventilation Rate
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Solar Reflectance Index (SRI)
45. Exterior surface of the building including all walls - windows - floor and roof. separates the building's inside from the outside
Market Transformation
Install submeters & Select local plants
Building Envelope (building shell)
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
46. Precipitation that is usually acidic. it has harmful effects on plants - aquatic animals - and infrastructure. it is mostly caused by human emissions of sulfur and nitrogen compounds which react in the atmosphere to produce acids. in recent years - m
Indoor Environmental Quality
Performance Monitoring
After bldg completion & once all submittals & clarifications are reviewed.
Acid Rain
47. Thermal comfort is typically attributed to what env factors?
Harvested Rainwater
Humidity - Air speed - and Tempt
90%
Floor-To-Area
48. A site that was previously built on - has been graded - or contained a parking lot - roadway - or other structure
Previously Developed Site
Green Power
Vehicle miles traveled
Water Balance
49. Part of construction waste management plan
Waste Management Plan
Air Quality Standards
Harvested Rainwater
Solar Reflectance Index (SRI)
50. A material's ability to reflect sunlight measured on a scale of 0 (black) to 1 (white). a value of 0.0 indicates that the surface absorbs all solar radiation and a value of 1.0 represents total reflectivity.
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
Albedo
Regional Material
Commingled Recycling