Skip to main content

Regency Centers receive LEED certifications in North Carolina and Illinois

5/16/2012

Jacksonville, Fla. -- Regency Centers, a national owner, operator and developer of grocery-anchored and community shopping centers, announced that buildings at two of its shopping centers in North Carolina and Illinois have received LEED Silver established by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC).



The certified projects are Market at Colonnade, a 57,637-sq.-ft. ground-up infill center anchored by Whole Foods Market in Raleigh, N.C., and the 51,298-sq.-ft. Mariano’s Fresh Market at Roscoe Square, the company’s first LEED-certified redevelopment, a 140,461-sq.-ft. neighborhood center in Chicago.



Since 2009, 80% of Regency’s development and redevelopment projects have sought LEED certification. The company currently has 17 LEED-registered projects, including five that have received final certification, three more under construction, and nine in predevelopment.



Some of the sustainability highlights at Market at Colonnade include:



  • Low impact design (LID) captures and reuses up to 300,000 gallons of stormwater runoff for site irrigation and plumbing;

  • Regency collaborated with North Carolina State University on the design, monitoring the project’s effectiveness and harnessing key; and

  • Learnings for improvement of stormwater management practices within the industry.




In addition, the center’s anchor, Whole Foods Market, earned LEED Gold for commercial interiors and partnered with the U.S. Department of Energy and its Net-Zero Energy Program Commercial Building Initiative to create an energy-efficient grocery space.



The project also includes two electric car charging stations for customer use.



At Roscoe Square, sustainability highlights include:



  • The 31-year-old center was retrofitted with a green roof and underground detention cistern to better manage stormwater runoff;

  • Building insulation, high-performance glazing and energy-efficient lighting strategies are combine to reduce overall expected energy use by more than 20% compared to pre-redevelopment levels;

  • Seventy-percent of the expected core and shell electricity usage for two years has been offset with renewable energy certificates; and

  • New materials used in construction were selected to maximize recycled content and regionally sourced materials.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds