crops that groow in the autumn.
the wilderness road leed to kentucky from the east.
The first day of Autumn/Fall is called the autumnal equinox.
Autumn.
You mean, do they have the season Autumn? Yes they do. The whole US has Autumn, or some people call it Fall.
In Leed's what?
Melveen Leed's birth name is Melveen Kuuleipuanani Leed.
Daniel Leed's birth name is Daniel Joseph Leed.
LEED Green Associate
The exams required to be a licensed architect are LEED Green Associate, LEED AP with specialty, and LEED Fellow.
The LEED AP distinction stands for a LEED certified Accredited Professional. LEED, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, is a green building rating system designed to rate buildings on sustainability.
LEED® Accredited Professional (AP)
There are many LEED training courses available. Taking part of them will help in your LEED certification a lot. LEED training courses are given by Ever blue and by the Green Exam Academy, for example.
AP associated with LEED stand for Accredited Professional. If you need more facts and latest news regarding LEED, you can find it at.. http://leedingnews.com/
A LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Building is a building that has achieved LEED certification at a particular level. There are varying levels of building certification (Certified, Silver, Gold, and Platinum). A LEED building must go through the submission, review and approval process to obtain certification. You can visit Green Design Community at greendesigncommunity.com to connect with tons of LEED AP's & GA's who can answer any other LEED related questions you may have.
LEED is an acronym for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. GA is an abbreviation for Green Associate.
Great question. I am a LEED accredited professional and architect who has had exposure to the design and documentation of LEED buildings. As a brief background, LEED stands for "Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design". It was put into place by the US Green Building Council many years ago, and in recent years has really caught on. There are a few types of LEED rating systems, depending on the nature of the facility under review. For example LEED-NC is for new construction, LEED-CI is for LEED corporate interiors, and LEED-EB is for existing buildings. Each rating system has its own lengthy list of strategies that can be applied to approve the efficiency and sustainability of a facility. In New Construction, the main categories are Site Selection, Water Efficiency, Energy and Atmosphere, Materials and Resources, Indoor Air Quality, and Innovation in Design. Each of these main categories have many sub-strategies. If the building meets the requirements of the various criteria - credit is given in the form of points. If enough total points are obtained, the building is eligible for LEED ratings. The minimal threshold for rating is called "LEED Rated". If enough extra points are obtained beyond this, the building can vault up to "LEED Silver". Even more points and eventually it becomes "LEED Gold". The highest possible rating is "LEED Platinum". Now back to your question: What are the disadvantages of LEED? I would say that one disadvantage is that designers that are inexperienced with LEED may tend to become pre-occupied with meeting a checklist, rather than spending that time arriving at inventive and creative design solutions specific to that site/project (that may or may not have also achieved LEED rating). Another potential disadvantage to LEED is the belief that a building is "good" merely because it achieved LEED ratings. On a massive scale, this could potentially lead to an era of architecture with an inappropriate standard of judging a building. Having said this, it is my own personal belief that LEED is a positive force.