Interiorscape Project Paves Way, Securing LEED Credits 

Interior Landscape Project Secures LEED Credits

LEED awards credits for the inclusion interior plantscapes via the Innovation in Upgrades, Operations & Maintenance (IUOM) Credit 1.2  

Biophilic Connection.

Since 2002 Green Plants for Green Buildings (formerly known as Plants at Work), has continuously engaged the USGBC through numerous channels to share awareness of the environmental and human-centered benefits of indoor plants. A few of those efforts have included:

In turn, the USGBC's green building certification program, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) has demonstrated a growing understanding and appreciation of the human health and well being  quotient in the credit arena.

plantsToday, while consultations and conversations are ablaze around the topic of augmenting certification criteria to include credits for the inclusion of interior plants, innovative and inspired project managers have moved along.  Project coordinator, Linda Thomas for E &E (The Ecology and Environment) Headquarters building in Lancaster, NY submitted and was awarded the first known case in which LEED credits have been awarded specifically for  interior plants.

The project submission positioned the interior plant designs in the Innovation in Operation and Maintenance credit category under LEED for Existing Buildings 2.0. More specifically, the credit was awarded for the Biophilic connection.

E & E’s Headquarter Building provides a connection to the natural world through the use of indoor plantings, the use of natural and local materials, proximity to animals, and other biophilic design attributes.

"For years, the papers have been telling us that plants absorb harmful elements in room air or even render them harmless. Some also say that microorganisms in the soil counter-act the poisons that plants take up through their leaves and give off through their roots…

Quite apart from the measurable advantages of houseplants, the psychological aspects are significant. Plants undoubtedly have a positive effect on humans. Business enterprises don't spend a great deal on money for green plants in their offices only because of their looks!"

(The Houseplant Encyclopedia, Ursula Kruger, Firefly Books, Buffalo, NY, 1997, pg. 94)