PRESS RELEASE
Release Date: Friday, July 25th 2008
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: |
Karen Sibert |
WASHINGTON, DC – The Downtown DC Business Improvement District (BID) has released a new leadership paper, “Greening Downtown DC: Strategies for Protecting the Planet, People and Profit,” which highlights the organization’s efforts to make Downtown DC more environmentally sustainable.
Downtown DC is poised to become one of the nation’s most environmentally sustainable places and the Downtown BID has launched the comprehensive “Greening Downtown DC” initiative ( www.downtowndc.org/green) to make the Downtown BID area more competitive and attractive to a host of stakeholders, including investors, businesses and employees. This effort consists of programs and services where the Downtown BID serves as a facilitator and a catalyst by forming partnerships to undertake research, establish benchmarks, communicate information and convene training sessions.
The Downtown BID’s greening initiative targets four interrelated areas: 1) greening new and existing buildings, 2) educating tenants on green best practices, 3) improving public spaces and 4) enhancing transportation options.
“Focusing on the triple bottom line of environmental protection, social responsibility and economic viability makes perfect sense,” says Richard Bradley, executive director of the Downtown BID. “It’s not only the right thing to do, but it pays dividends—from healthy work places that foster employee productivity to green collar jobs that create new employment opportunities, to green buildings that achieve above-market rents. Everyone benefits, and the implications for our cities are dynamic.”
The Leadership Paper, the third in the Downtown BID’s occasional series of working papers to foster dialogue about critical issues relating to Downtown Washington’s economic, social and physical environment, lists several factors behind Downtown’s move toward greater sustainability. They include rising energy costs creating immediate demand for greater energy efficiency and new technologies to control costs, DC government concerns about global warming and pollution proliferation, and demands by tenants to have sustainable office buildings and, thus, healthy work places.
“Our goal is to encourage green buildings—buildings designed, built, renovated and operated in an ecological and resource-efficient way,” says Matt Klein, chairman of the Downtown BID Board of Directors and president of Akridge, a full-service commercial real estate firm.
Among some of the paper’s highlights:
Says Bradley: “The Downtown BID will continue to do what it does best on behalf of stakeholders: convene roundtables, disseminate best practices, expand partnerships with various government agencies, nonprofit organizations and private companies to promote the Downtown BID area as a green leader.”
For copies of the leadership paper, please contact Scott Pomeroy at 202.661.7580 or greening@downtowndc.org. The report is also available on the Downtown BID’s website at www.downtowndc.org/leadership.