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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. Wood manufactured by binding together the strands - particles - fibers - or veneers of wood - together with adhesives - to form [first word] materials
Floor-To-Area
Gallons per Flush
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Composite Wood (engineered lumber)
2. A control system capable of monitoring environmental and system loads and adjusting HVAC operations accordingly in order to conserve energy while maintaining comfort (EPA)
Energy Management System
Energy Efficient
ASHRAE (ash-ray)
Compliant w/ the green design criteria
3. Enables project team members to work together from the project outset to develop solutions that have synergies and multiple benefits. the approach invests in design activities that increase the opportunity for integrated solutions with an eye to bett
Xeriscaping
Per-Consumer Content
Integrated Process
Hybrid Vehicle
4. Achieving net zero emissions by balancing the footprint with an equivalent amount of sequestered or offset green house gases
Diversity of Uses
Carbon Neutrality
High Performance Green Building
Indoor Air Quality
5. Plan that identifies a diversion rate goal and covers how waste will be either disposed or reused or recycled by addressing sorting - collection - and final disposal of items in an existing building
Solid Waste Management Policy
Extra categories for LEED for Neighborhood Development
Ecosystem
Montreal Protocol
6. 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
Diversity of Uses
LEED Credit
Community Connectivity
Heat Island Effect
7. A systematic process of assuring that a building and its systems performs in accordance with the design intent and the owner's requirements
Commissioning
Sustainable
Integrated Process
Charrette (shuh-ret)
8. A formal question asked of GBCI from the project team - who would then receive Credit Interpretation Ruling.
90%
Credit Interpretation Request
The four LEED levels
Air Quality Standards
9. The level of pollutants prescribed by regulations that are not to be exceeded during a given time in a defined area (EPA)
Gallons per Minute
90%
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Air Quality Standards
10. 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
Economic prosperity - environmental stewardship - & social responsibility.
Contaminant
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
Heat Islands
11. System or process for controlling the temperature - humidity - and sometimes the purity of the air in an interior space (office - warehouse - residence)
Air Conditioning
Floodplain
Energy Consumption / # of sq ft. Usually in Btus or kWh/sf/yr.
Location
12. Explores design options & alternatives with the intent to establish an agreed-upon project layout & scope of work.
Design
Design Development
Predesign
Schematic Design
13. Predesign - Design - Bid - Construction - and Occupancy
Construction Administration
LEED Category
Major Construction Phases
Perviousness
14. Third party certification program and the nationally accepted benchmark for the design - construction and operation of high performance green buildings (USGBC)
Green Cleaning
Positive Feedback Loop
LEED
Biodegradable
15. Standard comparison of the efficiency of an air filter. MERV ranges from 1 (least) to 16 (most efficient) - and measures a filter's ability to remove particles from 3 to 10 microns in size. developed by ASHRAE
Carbon Neutrality
Building Related Illness
MERV or Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value
Life-cycle cost analysis
16. 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
Carbon Overlay Tool
Photovoltaic Energy (PV)
Impervious Surfaces
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
17. Air and surface temperature differences between developed and underdeveloped areas
70%
Heat Islands
Emergent Properties
Retrocommissioning
18. An attempt to reduce peak period transportation use - such as allowing flex time in which employees may come to work before or after rush hour
Transportation Demand Management
Waste Management Plan
Xeriscaping
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
19. Products made from agricultural fiber such as wheat board and straw board
Agrifiber Product
Energy Consumption / # of sq ft. Usually in Btus or kWh/sf/yr.
LEED
Infill Development
20. 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
Pollution
Native or Indigenous Plants
Externality
Refrigerant
21. Any substance in air that could - in high enough concentration - harm man - other animals - vegetation - or material (EPA)
Greenfield
Airborne Pollutant
Construction Administration
Solar Reflectance Index (SRI)
22. 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.
LEED Requirements and Submittals
Reg a project w/ GBCI - pay applicable review fees - & submit doc.
Building Commissioning
Environmental Sustainability
23. 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.
Sulfur dioxide & Nitrogen oxide
Cradle to Cradle
LEED Credit Interpretation Ruling (CIR)
Indoor Environmental Quality
24. 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
Carbon Overlay Tool
British Thermal Unit (BTU)
Vegetated (Green) Roof
Feedback Loop
25. Very harsh - bright - dazzling light that interferes with visibility
LEED Category
Predesign
Glare
Closed System
26. Urinals that do not use water at all. these systems can save anywhere between 15000 and 45000 gallons of water per urinal per year
Credit Interpretation Request
Waterless Urinal
LEED Category
Agrifiber Product
27. Side effect or consequence of an industrial or commercial activity that affects other parties without this being reflected in the price of the goods or services involved - i.e. the pollution created in power generation for one state blown over anothe
Connections & Communication btw professionals & throughout the life of a project
Externality
Life-cycle cost analysis
The average marginal cost is less than 2%. In addition. it reduces use - consumption - cost - & liability.
28. Type of lamp designed to replace an incandescent lamp and fit into existing light fixtures formerly used for incandescent bulbs. compared to incandescent lamps giving the same amount of visible light - these generally use less power - have a longer r
Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL)
Positive Feedback Loop
Heat Islands
Vegetated (Green) Roof
29. Certified (40-49) - Silver (50-59) - Gold (60-79) - and Platinum (80+)
Baseline v. Actual Use
Rainwater Harvesting
The four LEED levels
Value Engineering
30. Mixture of smoke from the burning end of a cigarette - pipe - or cigar and smoke exhaled by the smoker
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
LEED NC&MR
Carbon Neutrality
LEED Intent
31. When large amounts of outdoor air are forced through a recently completed building for a period of time so that the majority of pollutant emissions from building materials - finishes and furnishings can be removed from the building before occupancy.
Cradle to Grave
Flush-Out
Dry Pond (detention ponds)
LEED Category
32. 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
Conservation
Global Warming
Renewable Energy
Construction Phases Bidding
33. Rainwater that has been collected for uses such as landscaping irrigation - toilet flushing - or other non-potable water uses
Harvested Rainwater
Baseline Vs Design
Rapidly Renewable Materials
Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS)
34. The amount of water the design case conserves vs the baseline case
LEED Credit Checklist
Water Balance
Baseline Vs Design
Negative Feedback Loop
35. The process of adapting old structures for purposes other than those initially intended. this saves on new materials needed. ex: warehouse turned into condos. also refers to the design of a new building with consideration to what it could be used for
Market Transformation
Submeter
Adaptive Reuse
90%
36. An underground layer of water-bearing permeable rock or unconsolidated materials (gravel - sand - silt or clay) from which groundwater can be usefully extracted using a water well. these are critically important in human habitation and agriculture. t
Water Balance
Rating system and Project size
Green Cleaning
Aquifer
37. An interactive energy management tool for tracking and assessing energy and water consumption across an entire portfolio of buildings
Energy Star Portfolio Manager
LEED Rating System
Reduce light transpass
Portable water uses
38. The min' floor area for CI
Adaptive Plant
250 square ft
Green Washing
Blackwater (Treatment and definitions vary)
39. Human made surroundings that provide the setting for human activity - ranging in scale from personal shelter and buildings to neighborhoods and cities
Design
Regenerative
Integrated Process
Built Environment
40. A site that is undeveloped and in a natural state or has been used for agriculture
United States Green Building Council (USGBC)
Daylighting
LEED Category
Greenfield
41. The coordinated use of pest and environmental info with available pest control methods to prevent unacceptable levels of pest damage by the most economical means and with the least possible hazard to people - property - and the environment
Climate Change
Positive Feedback Loop
Integrated Pest Management
Building Density
42. 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
LEED Credit Checklist
Integrated Process
Construction Documents
Pollution
43. 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
33%-39%
Passive Design
Environmentally Preferable Products
Commissioning Plan
44. Method of land use regulation used by local governments in most developed countries. zoning may be use-based (regulating the uses to which land may be put) - or it may regulate building height - lot coverage - and similar characteristics - or some co
Zoning
Rapidly Renewable Materials
Infill Development
Cooling Tower
45. Schematic Design - Design Development - and Construction Documents
Nonpoint-source pollution
Market Transformation
Outdoor Air
Design
46. 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
Floodplain
Thermal Comfort
Alternative Fuel Vehicle
Value Engineering
47. Temperature of the surrounding air or other medium (EPA)
Acid Rain
Ambient Temperature
Ozone (O3)
Integrated Pest Management
48. Web portal and site that allows teams to register a LEED project and to upload each section of the certification application
LEED Online
Commissioning Report
Post-Consumer Recycled Content
Rapidly Renewable Materials
49. Materials and products are made from plants that are typically harvested within a 10 year cycle or shorter and are grown and harvested sustainably
Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan
Rapidly Renewable Materials
Building Footprint
Energy Star Rating
50. The relationship btw the total bldg floor area & the allowable land area the bldg can cover.
Construction Documents
Baseline v. Design
Metering
Floor-To-Area