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Home » News » National

Friday, July 10, 2009

Empire State Building goes green

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Renters willing to pay for LEED certification

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS
Sunlight illuminates New York's Empire State Building (center) against a cloud-darkened sky. The building's owners decided to replace its thousands of windows with insulated windows as part of a $120 million green remodeling.
  • Chicago's Sears Tower, which will soon be renamed the Willis Tower, is shown in architectural renderings of its future look after a five-year $350 million green renovation. A view of the 66th floor roof (above) shows proposed solar panels and wind turbines.
  • This architectural rendering released by Adrian Smith & Gordon Gill Architecture shows the Sears

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By Chris Kahn ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK

When the owners of the Empire State Building decided to blanket its towering facade this year with thousands of insulating windows, they were only partly interested in saving energy.

They also needed tenants.

After 78 years, Manhattan's signature office building had lost its sheen as one of the city's most desirable places to work. To get it back, the owners did what an increasing number of property owners have done -- they went green, shelling out $120 million on a variety of environmental improvements, a move would have been considered a huge gamble a few years ago.

Buildings that define city skylines across the country, some national icons, are catching up to the sleek new structures designed with efficiency in mind, as property owners and managers become convinced that a greener building now makes financial sense.

That's because in recent years environmental retrofits have begun to pay off for owners and tenants alike. Higher-profile companies are seeking out more efficient office space, and new technology at older buildings has started to translate into higher property values, leases and occupancy rates.

"In a good market, we're going to get the best rents for the best tenants," said Anthony E. Malkin, who leads a real estate group that owns the Empire State Building. "In a bad market like we have now, we're going to get tenants when other buildings won't."

Renovation specialists across the country have been plugging porous walls in numerous old buildings, adding high-tech water systems and using recycled material in carpets and tile.

One of them is the Christman Building in Lansing, Mich., an 81-year-old Elizabethan Revival office that's listed on the National Register of Historic Places. While repairing the limestone exterior and preserving unique details like the mica light fixtures, the building's owners spent $8.5 million to add water-efficient plumbing and increase the amount of natural light. They also capped the building with a reflective "cool" roof.

Chicago's Sears Tower, which is going to be renamed the Willis Tower later this year, announced late last month that it will embark on a five-year, $350 million green renovation. The 110-story, staggered skyscraper, which turned 36 this year, will crown its rooftops with solar panels, wind turbines and up to 35,000 square feet of sunlight-absorbing gardens.

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