NFRC in the News - Selected Article
Title
The BOMA Magazine
October 2006
New State Energy
Codes - What You Need to Know
By Jim Benney
Building
energy codes that address the energy performance of fenestration
products (windows, glass doors, and glass curtain wall systems)
in residential buildings are commonplace. In recent years, however,
states all across America have begun to address fenestration in
nonresidential buildings as well.
As
of late last year, 37 states and the District of Columbia have
adopted nonresidential state energy codes that reference or require
the use of energy performance ratings certified by the National
Fenestration Rating Council (NFRC), according to the Building
Codes Assistance Project (BCAP). BCAP provides custom-tailored
assistance on building energy code adoption and implementation.
NFRC,
the only organization recognized by the U.S. Department of Energy
for determining the energy performance ratings of fenestration
products, rates and certifies products for U-factor (insulating
value), solar heat gain, air leakage, visible light transmittance
and condensation resistance. These ratings are determined by accredited,
independent labs (such as Quality Testing) in accordance with
NFRC procedures. NFRC labeling allows building officials to reliably
verify energy code compliance and gives them a quick and simple
way to measure the energy performance of fenestration products.
A
few states, such as California , Florida and Oregon , have directly
adopted NFRC nonresidential requirements into their independent,
state-specific codes. In these cases and under specific circumstances,
building owners and managers must certify fenestration systems
through NFRC. In other states, NFRC is referenced in building
energy codes as a result of adoption of national model energy
codes developed by the International Code Council (ICC) and its
predecessors beginning in 1995. Because these codes typically
offer a punitive default option, NFRC certification of nonresidential
products is commonplace across the country.
Owners
and Managers Need to Be Aware
It
is important for owners and managers to become familiar with nonresidential
energy codes that incorporate fenestration rating requirements
because building officials will be enforcing them. Because nonresidential
fenestration products play a significant role in the energy performance
of a building, NFRC began developing a system for rating and labeling
nonresidential products in 1999. In 2001, NFRC launched its Site-Built
Program, which allows manufacturers, glazing contractors, architects,
specifiers, and building owners and managers to rate, label and
compare fenestration products and to verify compliance with energy
code requirements. But because nonresidential products typically
are assembled on site rather than uniformly in a factory, the
rating and labeling systems differ in important respects.
Products intended
for site-built applications such as typical high-rise nonresidential
applications are not labeled. Instead, energy performance information
is displayed on an NFRC Label Certificate, which should be on
file in the general contractor's office or posted on the job site.
(Labels are typically attached directly to fenestration products
installed in low-rise commercial buildings.)
The need for
a “licensed entity or responsible party” because of the absence
of a manufacturer. This party, which may be a glazing contractor
or installer, a lineal supplier, a building owner, an architect
or even a construction specifier, agrees to guarantee the performance
of the certified products that have been specified and installed
on the building envelope.
NFRC
Improving Nonresidential Rating and Labeling
NFRC's
rating and labeling programs are widely recognized as the industry
standard, but the organization is constantly working to improve
its programs. Based on feedback from users of the Site-Built Program,
and to meet new requirements established by the California Energy
Commission, NFRC is developing a series of improvements for nonresidential
product rating and labeling options for the commercial sector.
These
new improvements will:
Simplify the
process, reducing the time it takes for participants to rate and
reduce related costs.
Provide licensees
with an alternate means of rating and labeling products that will
meet new requirements in California and other states.
As
more and more states adopt nonresidential building energy codes
that include NFRC requirements, commercial buildings become energy-efficient.
As this trend continues, it is crucial for building owners and
managers to familiarize themselves with their state's nonresidential
energy codes and any NFRC requirements they may include.
NFRC
is committed to working with the building industry to develop
fenestration standards that meet the needs of a fair, accurate
and credible rating system NFRC continually strives to improve
its rating and labeling programs, and the nonresidential product
rating program is a giant step in that direction.
Jim
Benney is NFRC's Executive Director.
He
can be reached at jbenney@nfrc.org
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