Mixed Use

Reference Guide for Tenants

Green leasing can produce financial and sustainability gains as well as achieve a fundamental shift in what buildings can achieve for occupants and communities. Green leasing practices allow tenants and landlords to collaborate and save energy, reduce costs and achieve organizational sustainability goals.  Developed by the U.S. Department of Energy, this document that provides guidance […]

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Reference Guide for Landlords

Green leasing can produce financial and sustainability gains as well as achieve a fundamental shift in what buildings can achieve for occupants and communities. Green leasing practices allow tenants and landlords to collaborate and save energy, reduce costs and achieve organizational sustainability goals.  Developed by the U.S. Department of Energy, IMT and Berkeley Lab, this

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Measuring the Potential Impact of Green Leases in the U.S. Office Sector

Most office buildings in the United States are not energy efficient, leaving both landlords and tenants with unnecessary energy expenses. Through an analysis of current energy efficiency measures facilitated by the signing of green (or energy- aligned) leases, this 2015 study estimates that green leases have the potential to reduce energy consumption in office buildings

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New Leasing Languages: How Green Leasing Programs Can Help Overcome the Split Incentive

Typical leases often create a split incentive between the building owners and tenants where the cost of investing in energy and water efficiency improvements is assumed by one party while the other experiences the benefit of reduced utility costs resulting from those improvements. This resource outlines research on the benefits of incorporating energy efficient language

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Why traditional leases don’t measure up and what we need instead

As demand for climate action soars, more businesses and local governments are realizing that buildings are a huge contributor to carbon emissions, particularly in cities. To address this, local governments are increasingly turning to building performance standards, such as New York’s Local Law 97, to meet their climate commitments by reducing building energy use and associated carbon

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Behind-the-scenes: How Cincinnati is Improving Energy Equity

The City of Cincinnati identified a high level of energy burden among its residents compared to peer cities, and wanted an equitable way to reduce energy costs. As part of the Bloomberg American Cities Climate Challenge (Climate Challenge), the City developed a suite of programs called WarmUp Cincy that offers financial incentives to support for both tenants

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Building the Case for Efficiency in Buildings: Tools You Can Use

What is the business case for energy efficiency in buildings? Earlier this year, the City Energy Project—a joint initiative of IMT and the Natural Resources Defense Council—sought to tackle this question by interviewing executives at three leading real estate companies. In synthesizing their feedback in a recently released report, CEP aimed to identify commonalities that

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All Roads Lead to Green Leasing

Real estate in the U.S. and around the world is experiencing an astronomical disruption that will reshape the future of buildings, how they are built, operated and occupied for the foreseeable future. As 2020 comes to a close, there is still robust debate about how to revive and potentially re-imagine commercial real estate, but in

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Green Leasing by the Numbers

To demonstrate the extensive impact of green leasing and programs that support its adoption, IMT, the Department of Energy (DOE), and RE Tech Advisors collaborated to develop a paper for the ACEEE Summer Study: New Leasing Languages: How Leasing Programs can Overcome the Split Incentive. The paper explores the impact of green leasing programs, tenant engagement,

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Behind-the-Scenes: Why Fort Collins Adopted Green Leases

Local governments have a critical role to play in reducing greenhouse gases, particularly those related to emissions from buildings. While much of their impact is tied to policy, local governments also play an influential role as landlords and tenants. In that capacity, an increasing number of localities are leveraging green leases to address sustainability goals while lowering

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Green Lease Leaders