SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. Development that occurs within established urban areas where the site or area either is a vacant place between other developments or has previously been used for another urban purpose
Custodial Effectiveness Assessments
Infill Development
Energy Efficient
Embodied Energy
2. Areas where the upper soil is no longer exposed - including paved areas - walkways - fountains - etc.
Hardscape
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)
5 years
3. Systems withing systems that are related because they affect and effect each other
Heat Islands
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
Nested System
Light Pollution
4. The process of verifying - in new construction - that all the systems and subsystems are efficiently designed and installed properly to achieve the owner's project requirements and as designed by the building architects and engineers.
Building Commissioning
40%
Square Footage of a Building
Schematic Design
5. What is reduced when a project uses reclaimed water in its cooling towers?
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
MERV or Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value
LEED Category
Portable water uses
6. Thermal comfort is typically attributed to what env factors?
Passive Design
Hard Cost
Humidity - Air speed - and Tempt
Major Construction Phases
7. An increase in the near surface temp of the earth. this has occurred in the distant past as the result of natural influences - but the term is most often used to refer to the warming predicted to occur as a result of increased emissions of greenhouse
Reuse
Bypass otherwise required submittals
Global Warming
Biodiversity
8. The presence in water of enough harmful or objectionable material to damage the water's quality (EPA)
Ozone (O3)
Construction Administration
MERV or Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value
Water Pollution
9. 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
Building Codes
Location & Linkages. Awareness & Education
Hardscape
10. non-native plants that use less fertilizer - pesticides and water in a given landscape. these plants have adapted to the local climate and are not considered invasive plants or weeds.
Impervious Surfaces
Biofuel
Aquifer
Adaptive Plant
11. The carbon overlay in LEED is used for what?
Infill Development
Gallons per Flush
To prioritize the relative impact of credits on GHG emissions
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
12. A systematic process of assuring that a building and its systems performs in accordance with the design intent and the owner's requirements
Indoor Air Quality Building Education and Assessment Model (I-BEAM)
Cradle to Cradle
Market Transformation
Commissioning
13. In LEED credit weightings - the most important impact category
Climate Change
Floor-To-Area
Economic prosperity - environmental stewardship - & social responsibility.
Hard Cost
14. An intense collaborative session where participants make a concerted effort to solve a problem or plan the design of something
Thermal Comfort
Open Space
High Performance Green Building
Charrette (shuh-ret)
15. 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
Environmental Sustainability
Installing submeters & using ENERGY STAR certified cloths washers
Indoor Environmental Quality
Energy Conservation
16. Building that is energy and resource efficient
High Performance Green Building
Life Cycle Costing (LCC)
Green Building
Development Density
17. 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
Wet Pond (retention pond)
Integrated Process
Alternative Fuel Vehicle
18. Disciplinary Review Committee (Investigate) - Disciplinary Hearing Committee (Judgment) - and Credential Steering Committee (Final Decision) 2) Types of advantages discovered when initial investment are made in more durable products and efficient bld
Energy Use Intensity (EUI)
Byproduct
GBCI committees that addresses noncompliance in LEED credential
Hardscape
19. Certified (40-49) - Silver (50-59) - Gold (60-79) - and Platinum (80+)
The four LEED levels
Floor-To-Area
Fenestration
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
20. Energy Use Intensity in term of unit
Energy Consumption / # of sq ft. Usually in Btus or kWh/sf/yr.
Salvaged Materials
LEED Online
Schematic Design
21. Controllability of Systems
Install submeters & Select local plants
Flush-Out
Regional Material
The % of occupants who have direct control over tempt - airflow - & lighting in their spaces.
22. Human made surroundings that provide the setting for human activity - ranging in scale from personal shelter and buildings to neighborhoods and cities
Rating system and Project size
24%-50%
Baseline v. Actual Use
Built Environment
23. Life-cycle assessment is used to determine what?
Environmental aspect & potential impacts
Baseline v. Design
Indoor Air Quality Building Education and Assessment Model (I-BEAM)
LEED Points
24. A contractual benchmark that usually corresponds to the point at which a client could occupy a nearly completed space.
Substantial completion
LEED Category
Waste Management Plan
Project owner - Architect - Engineers - Commissioning authority - General Contractor - Facilities staff - Building users.
25. The ratio of energy radiated by a particular material to energy radiated by a black body at the same temperature. measure of a material's ability to radiate absorbed energy
Open Space
Emissivity (of a material)
Integrated Pest Management
ASHRAE (ash-ray)
26. When all recyclables for collection are mixed but kept separate from other waste
Commingled Recycling
70%
Regenerative
Location & Linkages. Awareness & Education
27. What are the added costs of bldg green & what benefits offset those cost?
British Thermal Unit (BTU)
GBCI committees that addresses noncompliance in LEED credential
The average marginal cost is less than 2%. In addition. it reduces use - consumption - cost - & liability.
Construction and Demolition Debris
28. 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
Indoor Air Quality Building Education and Assessment Model (I-BEAM)
United States Green Building Council (USGBC)
Volatile Organic Compound
Site Disturbance
29. 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
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
Impervious Surfaces
Biodegradable
Fenestration
30. 1) Cost of green bldg Each Prerequisite and Credit has 2 major components - and those are: Intents and Requirements
Baseline Building Performance
Major Construction Phases
Life-cycle cost analysis
Hardscape
31. A measure of the amount of illumination falling on a surface.
CO2 Concentrations/Monitoring
Rainwater Harvesting
Wet Pond (retention pond)
Foot Candle - A ftcandle is equal to 1-lumen/sq-ft
32. LEED certification fee is base on two factors.
Nested System
Rating system and Project size
LEED Category
Waste Stream Audit
33. The percentage of waste materials diverted from traditional disposal such as landfilling or incineration to be recycled - composted or reused (EPA)
Chiller
Custodial Effectiveness Assessments
Retrocommissioning
Diversion Rate
34. The area of the project site that has been disturbed for development. this area includes the building footprint - hardscapes - and parking lots
Waste Diversion
Volatile Organic Compound
Development Footprint
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
35. Web portal and site that allows teams to register a LEED project and to upload each section of the certification application
LEED Online
Floor Area Ratio
Gallons per Flush & Gallons per Minute
Refrigerant
36. When 2+ people share a ride in the same vehicle
Heat Islands
Commissioning Report
Compliant w/ the green design criteria
Carpool
37. Air quality within buildings as it relates to the health and comfort of building occupants
Off-Gassing (outgassing)
Indoor Air Quality
Schematic Design
LEED
38. What should take place during Occupancy?
Reduce light transpass
Periodic maintenance must occur. Recommissioning along with occupant surveying (via post-occupancy evaluation) at regular interval.
Performance Monitoring
Diversity of Uses
39. 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
Drip Irrigation
Non-Potable Water
Community Connectivity
Emergent Properties
40. Non-industrial wastewater generated from domestic processes such as dish washing - laundry and bathing. some states and local authorities allow kitchen sink water to be included. check local codes in order to comply with local regulations.
Nested System
Charrette (shuh-ret)
Graywater (Greywater)
Net-Zero Energy
41. How prerequisites and credits are grouped depending on the building type and rating system
Solid Waste Management Policy
Volatile Organic Compound
Foot Candle - A ftcandle is equal to 1-lumen/sq-ft
LEED Category
42. Process for project teams to obtain technical guidance on how LEED requirements pertain to their projects
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
Infill Development
Nonpoint-source pollution
Baseline v. Design
43. Water that is of sufficiently high quality so that it can be consumed or utilized without risk of immediate of long term harm by humans or animals
Diversion Rate
Design Development
Potable Water
Pollutant
44. What are the 3D sustainability often described as the triple bottom line or 3 legged stool?
Economic prosperity - environmental stewardship - & social responsibility.
24%-50%
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
5 years
45. The comparison between a standard gage and the estimated in a building's design scenario. in LEED - the [first word] usually refers to the EPAct 1992 water flow and flush rates
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
Underground Parking
Baseline v. Design
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
46. Prior to submitting CIR - what strategies should be considered?
Feedback Loop
Review credit intent & self-evaluate - Review past CIR - and Consult LEED reference guide
Sustainable Forestry
LEED Credit Checklist
47. Flat or nearby flat land adjacent to a stream or river that experiences occasional or periodic flooding
Integrated Design
Floodplain
Material Reuse
Harvested Rainwater
48. When costs are established and contracts for construction services are signed.
Construction Phases Bidding
Air Quality Standards
Diversion Rate
Community Connectivity
49. The number of different types of space per acre in an area - think of a mixed-use development - which has both houses and offices
Diversity of Uses
Previously Developed Site
Regenerative
The average marginal cost is less than 2%. In addition. it reduces use - consumption - cost - & liability.
50. 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
HVAC System
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
Open Grid Pavement
Baseline Building Performance