Green zoning

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Revision as of 19:59, 29 August 2019 by imported>Tmccormick

The incorporation of 'green' building standards into local land use law.

 

Critiques

[Wolf 2011]:

The focus of this essay is a growing practice to which we can attach the label “Green Zoning” — the incorporation of LEED and competing privately generated standards into local government law, as part of the existing zoning or land use ordinance, or as a free-standing green building ordinance. After reviewing some of the pertinent literature on this topic, this essay will highlight and provide illustrations of six problems with Green Zoning practices: 1. The Delegation Problem — Can and should local laws be based on a moving target (standards set by private parties that continue to change and evolve)? 2. The Compatibility Problem — Are some green building standards inconsistent with good planning practices? 3. The Expertise Problem — Are already overburdened local officials up to the task of incorporating, administering, and overseeing Green Zoning? 4. The Eco-Political Problem — How or should local officials factor in the battles waged over green building standards? 5. The Laboratory Problem — Are variations from locality to locality a good idea, or do state standards make more sense in this area? 6. The Philosophical Problem — What role should builders, architects, and industry experts play in shaping zoning and planning ordinances?

 


References

Wolf, Michael A. "A Yellow Light for 'Green Zoning/: Some Words of Caution About Incorporating Green Building Standards into Local Land Use Law." 43 Urb. Law. 949 (2011), available at http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/facultypub/300