Encourage care for trees with a reward/penalty system for contractors

Significant trees need extra protection.
The best way to ensure their protection on a building site is to award incentives or assess penalties that make it worthwhile for contractors to be mindful of these trees. Consider rewarding excavators and other project contractors when they are extra careful. Alternately, you can incorporate a penalty clause into contracts so that if designated trees are injured in the construction process, the contractor is liable. Protecting trees and ensuring healthy soil provides important wildlife habitats. Shade trees reduce cooling loads and mature trees can increase property value.

GREEN POINTS

LEED for HomesLeadership in Energy and Environmental Design. LEED for Homes is the residential green building program from the United States Green Building Council (USGBC). While this program is primarily designed for and applicable to new home projects, major gut rehabs can qualify. Anything you do outdoors will generally give you greater bang for "green buck" than anything you do in the structure. This is also true with LEED-H. The easiest to earn are often those related to landscape. These include SS2 (Sustainable Sites) — up to 7 points, SS3 — 1 point, SS4 — up to 7 points, and WE2 (Water Efficiency) — up to 4 points. Up to 4 Innovation points can be earned for exemplary performance with regard to these credits.

NGBSNational Green Building Standard Based on the NAHB Model Green Home Building Guidelines and passed through ANSI. This standard can be applied to both new homes, remodeling projects, and additions. /ICC-700: Under Chapter 4 - Site Design and Development: 4 pts. for On-site supervision and coordination (404.1); 4 pts. for installing fencing to protect trees and other plants (404.2.1); 4 pts. for avoiding soil compaction, trenching, and significant grade changes near critical root zones (404.2.2); 5 pts. for staking out limits to clearing and grading areas prior to construction (404.3.1); 4 pts. for creating "no disturbance" zones with fencing or flagging to protect sensitive areas from vehicles, material storage and washout (404.3.2}; 4 pts. for reducing soil compaction from construction equipment. Placing lightweight geogrids, mulch, chipped wood, plywood, OSB (oriented strand board), metal plates, etc. in the pathway of the equipment distributes its weight over a larger area. (404.3.5)

Learn more in the Green Building Encyclopedia:

Building Lot Overview
Landscape: Native Plants and Soil

Further Resources

BuildingGreen.com
Trees and Development: A Technical Guide to Preservation of Trees During Land Development

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