The 2007 Top Ten Green Building Products, announced by BuildingGreen at last month’s GreenBuild show in Chicago, offer a variety of environmental benefits.
Once again we present a comprehensive look at some of the year's more remarkable building-product offerings selected by a discerning jury of your peers. Each September, Architectural Record invites a jury of architects, lighting designers, and product specialists to convene for the day to help our editors select the most noteworthy building products of the year. It should come as no surprise that in the course of this year’s meeting—which took place during a turbulent week on Wall Street and in the last throes of the presidential race—that the parallel subjects of economy and energy were top of mind. Prototypes
Architectural Record’s 35th Annual Product Reports presents more than 300 of the year’s most innovative new Building products selected by a jury of architects and designers. Editors' Picks Top Ten Green Products What exactly constitutes an innovative building product? Each year, on behalf of our readership, architectural record tries to define this term by assembling a group of product experts—including architects, lighting designers, and product designers—who are given the task of delving through hundreds of submissions to find products that push the envelope of what is typically expected from offerings in that category. It is important to note that rewarding
Architectural Record’s 35th Annual Product Reports presents more than 300 of the year’s most innovative new Building products selected by a jury of architects and designers.
Architectural Record’s 35th Annual Product Reports presents more than 300 of the year’s most innovative new Building products selected by a jury of architects and designers.
Products that protect property and lives in the event of harsh weather conditions need to work reliably, whether or not anyone is present in the structure. Some of these products defend against the effects of a storm, while others go to work after other systems fail.