Receives LEED® Gold Existing Building Status from USGBC and Commits to 300 LEED Hotels in Five Years
Marriott International headquarters has been awarded the gold medal for green buildings. After a three-year effort to become more sustainable and environmentally-friendly, the 30-year-old building is celebrating its LEED® (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Existing Building Gold status – an investment that saves the company $700,000 annually and up to $1.3 million in expected tax credits over three years– in an event today with the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC).
This achievement moves the company closer to the goal announced last fall to expand its green building portfolio to approximately 300 properties in five years, the broadest commitment of its kind in the industry. Today, there are 40 LEED hotels certified or registered across nine Marriott International brands -- Courtyard, Fairfield Inn, Residence Inn, SpringHill Suites, TownePlace Suites, Marriott, JW Marriott, Renaissance and Ritz-Carlton. Much of the company’s green hotel expansion will be fueled by a new Courtyard hotel program that has filed for pre-certified LEED, making it faster, easier and less expensive for hotel owners. The new prototype is expected to save owners roughly $100,000, six months in design time and up to 25 percent energy and water savings.
“We have a companywide initiative to create more sustainable and greener hotel operations, and so we wanted to lead by example at our corporate headquarters,” said Jim Young, senior director, corporate facilities, Marriott International, Inc. and an integral member of Marriott’s Green Council – a cross-functional team responsible for creating and implementing the company’s environmental strategy. “We were able to reduce energy, water, and waste by collaborating with our 3,000 headquarters employees and like-minded strategic partners such as Philips, Kohler and Waste Management.”
Changes that led to Marriott International headquarters’ LEED Existing Building Gold status include:
Building on more than 20 years of energy conservation experience, Marriott is committed to protecting the environment. The company’s Spirit To Preserve® environmental strategy calls for: Greening its $10 billion supply chain; further reducing fuel consumption by 25 percent per available room; creating green construction standards for hotel developers to achieve LEED certification from the U.S. Green Building Council; educating and inspiring employees and guests to support the environment; and helping protect the rainforest.
For more information, visit www.marriott.com/environment. Also, join the conversation about traveling green by following MarriottGreen: www.twitter.com/marriottgreen.
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