2011 Greening the Heartland Conference Set

June 13, 2011
The Cincinnati Regional Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) will host the eighth annual Greening the Heartland conference June 22-24 at Duke Energy Convention Center in Cincinnati.

The Cincinnati Regional Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) will host the eighth annual Greening the Heartland conference June 22-24 at Duke Energy Convention Center in Cincinnati.

Approximately 1,000 architects, engineers, manufacturers, contractors, building owners, and facility managers from the 12-state Midwest region are expected to attend.

Keynote addresses will be delivered by R. Keith Harrison Jr., global product supply officer for Procter & Gamble; Julian Agyeman, professor and chair of urban and environmental policy and planning, Tufts University; and Scot Horst, senior vice president of the USGBC's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program. Also scheduled to speak is Andrew Winston, founder of Winston Eco-Strategies and author of "Green Recovery," a strategic plan for using environmental thinking to survive hard economic times.

Sessions are divided into four tracks: Residential, New Buildings, Existing Buildings, and Community. Featured sessions include:

• "Electric and Gas Utility Costs: What Duke Energy Is Deploying Today to Help Transition to a 'Smarter' Electric Grid in 2015," presented by Marc Arnold, manager, Midwest Smartgrid Field Deployment, Duke Energy.

• "What do LEED Plaques, Elephant Dung, and Manatee Pools Have in Common?" presented by Mark Fisher, director of facilities, planning, and sustainability, Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.

• "Developing an Energy Efficiency Workforce," presented by Andy Holzhauser and Chris Jones, Greater Cincinnati Energy Alliance.

• "Lighting Control for LEED," presented by Brennen Matthews, director of national specification sales, Lutron Electronics Inc.

• "A Real Life Net-Zero Energy Case Study – Melink Corporation," presented by Steve Melink, president, Melink Corp.

• "Net Zero Engineering for K-12 Schools," presented by Ken Seibert, president, CMTA.

For descriptions of more sessions, click here.

Thirteen American Institute of Architects and Green Building Certification Institute continuing-education units will be available. Also, LEED Certification Work Zone reviewers will be on hand to answer LEED-project questions, and tours of some of Cincinnati's most famous LEED-certified buildings will be offered.

For more information on the conference, including how to register, click here.