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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 written plan that outlines strategies to reduce stormwater runoff for the purposes of reducing erosion - pollution and sedimentation of nearby bodies of water - especially important during construction where so much dirt - dust and waste are presen
Space heating (38%). Lighting (20%)
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
HCFC
70%
2. Green Bldg can reduce how much Water Use?
Sustainable Forestry
40%
Economic prosperity - environmental stewardship - & social responsibility.
LEED Credit Checklist
3. The min' floor area for CI
Potable Water
250 square ft
LEED Points
The four LEED levels
4. Also known as green tags - RECs or tradable renewable certificates (TRCs) are tradable environmental commodities in the US which represent proof that 1 megawatt hour (MWh) of electricity was generated from an eligible renewable energy resource
Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)
250 square ft
70%
Embodied Energy
5. Water that is not treated to drinking water standards and is not meant for human consumption
Erosion
Negative Feedback Loop
Non-Potable Water
Regenerative
6. A formal question asked of GBCI from the project team - who would then receive Credit Interpretation Ruling.
Diversity of Uses
Stormwater Runoff
Process Water
Credit Interpretation Request
7. 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
GBCI committees that addresses noncompliance in LEED credential
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Baseline v. Design
To qualify for Minimum Program Requirements
8. 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 Conservation
Integrated Process Team
Energy Management System
Building Envelope (building shell)
9. Gives preference to the purchase of environmentally preferable products and the companies that supply them
Diversion Rate
Green Building
40%
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
10. Predesign - Design - Bid - Construction - and Occupancy
Baseline Vs Design
HCFC
Major Construction Phases
Periodic maintenance must occur. Recommissioning along with occupant surveying (via post-occupancy evaluation) at regular interval.
11. Concept of integrative design emphasizes
Conventional Irrigation
Integrated Design
Community Connectivity
Connections & Communication btw professionals & throughout the life of a project
12. Life-cycle assessment is used to determine what?
Environmental aspect & potential impacts
British Thermal Unit (BTU)
Light Trespass
Carbon Neutrality
13. The area of the project site that is impacted by construction activity - LEED project should attempt to limit site disturbance
Site Disturbance
Hard Cost
Submeter
Evapotranspiration
14. A systematic process of assuring that a building and its systems performs in accordance with the design intent and the owner's requirements
Feedback Loop
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
Commissioning
Green Power
15. Urinals that do not use water at all. these systems can save anywhere between 15000 and 45000 gallons of water per urinal per year
Light Trespass
None.
Predesign
Waterless Urinal
16. The practice of creating structures and using processes that are environmentally responsible and resource efficient throughout a building's life cycle from siting to design - construction - operation - maintenance - renovation and deconstruction. thi
Baseline v. Actual Use
70%
Green Building
Heat Island Effect
17. Very harsh - bright - dazzling light that interferes with visibility
Sulfur dioxide & Nitrogen oxide
Glare
Environmental Sustainability
Green Power
18. Viewing the world as an interrelated set of systems that can influence one another
Vehicle miles traveled
Systems Thinking
Green Building
Bypass otherwise required submittals
19. The min' floor area for NC - CS - Schools - EB - and O&M
250 square ft
Greenhouse Gases
Natural (or passive) Ventilation
1000 square ft
20. Allowing pedestrians to walk between areas without interference from walls - highways or other barriers
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
LEED Project Boundary
Carbon Neutrality
Pedestrian Access
21. Comparison between a standard gage and an actual result. in LEED - the [first part] usually refers to the EPAct 1992 water flow and flush rates while the [second part] would represent an existing building.
Indoor Air Quality
Nested System
Baseline v. Actual Use
Life-cycle cost analysis
22. How prerequisites and credits are grouped depending on the building type and rating system
Green Building
Baseline Vs Design
LEED Category
Conservation
23. Uses the natural forces of wind and buoyancy to deliver fresh air into buildings through doors - windows or other designed opening (chimneys)
Natural (or passive) Ventilation
1000 square ft
Imperviousness
Community Connectivity
24. What should take place during Occupancy?
Air Quality Standards
Periodic maintenance must occur. Recommissioning along with occupant surveying (via post-occupancy evaluation) at regular interval.
After bldg completion & once all submittals & clarifications are reviewed.
Mostly environmental impacts & human benefits
25. What's the earliest pt at which a LEED for Schools proejct can be cert?
LEED Pilot Credit Library
Major Construction Phases
Integrated Design
After bldg completion & once all submittals & clarifications are reviewed.
26. Colorless - odorless gas that is present in the atmosphere and is formed when any fuel containing carbon is burned. it is breathed out of animal's lungs during respiration - is produced by the decay of organic matter - and is used by plants in photos
Nonpoint-source pollution
Green Building
Innovation in Design & Regional Priority has 100 with 10 bonus points. Leed for home has 125.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
27. What are the added costs of bldg green & what benefits offset those cost?
Externality
The average marginal cost is less than 2%. In addition. it reduces use - consumption - cost - & liability.
Gallons per Minute
Climate Change
28. Material that is sourced and manufactured within 500 miles of the project. usually expressed as a percentage of total project material
Regional Material
Per-Consumer Content
Invasive Plants
Blackwater (Treatment and definitions vary)
29. An intense collaborative session where participants make a concerted effort to solve a problem or plan the design of something
Heat Islands
Indoor Environmental Quality Management Plan
LEED Points
Charrette (shuh-ret)
30. Waste materials diverted from traditional disposal such as landfills or incineration to be recycled - composted - or re-used. (EPA) measured in tons
Waste Diversion
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
Bypass otherwise required submittals
Integrated Process
31. Heating - ventilating and air conditioning. these systems seek to provide thermal comfort and acceptable indoor air quality
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
HVAC System
Reg a project w/ GBCI - pay applicable review fees - & submit doc.
Building Envelope (building shell)
32. What is the procedure required to achieve LEED cert?
Reg a project w/ GBCI - pay applicable review fees - & submit doc.
Floodplain
Vehicle miles traveled
Gallons per Flush & Gallons per Minute
33. Water used for building systems such as boiler feed water - cooling water for heat exchangers - chillers - etc
Process Water
Biodiversity
Market Transformation
5 years
34. 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
Potable Water
Chiller
Cradle to Cradle
LEED Credit Checklist
35. A roof of a building that is partially or completely covered with vegetation and soil - or a growing medium - planted over a waterproofing membrane
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
Acid Rain
Non-renewable Resource
Vegetated (Green) Roof
36. Under building - tuck-under - or a stacked parking structure that minimizes the need for exposed parking and parking lots
Emissivity (of a material)
Underground Parking
Design
Building Envelope (building shell)
37. 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
Non-Potable Water
Construction Waste Management Plan
Rating system and Project size
Site Disturbance
38. Documentation of the results of the commissioning process - including the as-built state of the HVAC system and any unresolved issues found at the time the commissioning process was completed
Systems Thinking
Adaptive Plant
Xeriscaping
Commissioning Report
39. 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
Development Density
Baseline v. Design
Daylighting
Wastewater
40. A member based nonprofit organization whose mission is to transform the way buildings and communities are designed - built - and operated - enabling an environmentally and socially responsible - healthy and prosperous environment that improves the qu
United States Green Building Council (USGBC)
General requirement for LEED certification documentation
Pedestrian Access
Integrated Process
41. Previously used or redeveloped land that may be contaminated with hazardous waste or pollution (USGBC). the land has the potential to be reused once any hazardous substances - pollutants - or contaminants are remediated
Net-Zero Energy
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
Space heating (38%). Lighting (20%)
Brownfields
42. 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
Biomass
Integrated Pest Management
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Triple Bottom Line
43. Material - other than the principle product - generated as a consequence of an industrial process or as a breakdown product in a living system (EPA)
Indoor Environmental Quality
1000 square ft
Byproduct
Heat Island Effect
44. 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
Charrette (shuh-ret)
Building Codes
45. Pavement that is less than 50% impervious and contains vegetation in the open cells
Open Grid Pavement
Project owner - Architect - Engineers - Commissioning authority - General Contractor - Facilities staff - Building users.
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
Credit Interpretation Rulings (CIRs)
46. In LEED credit weightings - the most important impact category
Construction Waste Management Plan
Construction Documents
Wet Pond (retention pond)
Climate Change
47. 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
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Energy Management System
Sulfur dioxide & Nitrogen oxide
Water Pollution
48. Renewable energy such as solar - wind - biomass - hydro - and geothermal energy
Air Conditioning
Green Power
Global Warming
Net-Zero Energy
49. When an exisiting building undergoes the commissioning process to discover if improvements or changes should be made to improve the building
Market Transformation
Off-Gassing (outgassing)
Retrocommissioning
Cooling Tower
50. System where energy is taken from the output of a system and reapplied to the input - or A produces more of B which in turn produces more of A. i.e. population growth -- adults make children whom in turn make more adults
Positive Feedback Loop
Sustainable Purchasing Policy
Blackwater (Treatment and definitions vary)
Embodied Energy