|  | Intended purpose: 
 This handbook goes beyond stating that ‘green’ 
is good. This handbook of sustainable development projects in 
Michigan is intended to demystify “green” development 
practices for real estate developers, design professionals, and 
policy-makers in the State of Michigan and beyond.  By explaining sustainable development practices, identifying 
the market for green buildings and grounding the concept in eleven 
built projects within this state, the publication hopes to catch 
the attention of those private and public individuals engaged 
in development.   Audience: 
This document was designed and organized to cater to the needs 
and interests of any group or individual involved in real estate 
acquisition and/or development. This includes: 
  
 Real estate developers Design professionals, such as landscape architects, architects, 
and planners Local and state policy-makers Building owners Current and prospective homeowners  Message(s): 
 Sustainable development is feasible and affordable in Michigan. 
It has an increasing presence in the state and the demand for 
green development is rising (see handbook pages 14-15, 20-24). The benefits of sustainable development include financial, 
environmental, and social outcomes (see handbook pages 9-11). Green development can vary from simple actions, using off-the-shelf 
technologies, to more complex, integrated strategies (see handbook 
pages 16-17). The integrated, green design approach pays considerable dividends 
to the developer, the community, and the environment (see handbook 
pages 18-19). Eleven case studies of sustainable development projects in 
Michigan (representing residential, institutional, commercial 
and educational facilities), demonstrate the feasibility and benefits 
of sustainable / green development in this climate and in this 
real estate market (see handbook pages 28-101). Method of development (hand rendering, computer graphics, 
etc.): 
 Handbook content and case study projects were chosen through 
collaboration with the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality 
(MDEQ).  Introductory content (handbook pages 9-25) was developed by 
in-person interviews, materials collected from conferences attended 
by the authors, as well as publications and periodicals on the 
subject. Creating the eleven case study narratives required interviewing 
the ultimate clients, making multiple site visits, coordinating 
professional photography, and following up with discussions with 
developers, contractors, architects, landscape architects, engineers, 
and lending institutions to assemble the relevant details (handbook 
pages 28-101).  The document was composed using QuarkXpress desktop publishing 
software. Impact and effectiveness:  
 This publication, in its many forms, will hopefully advance
    the conversation around green and sustainable development in the
state of Michigan encourage others to undertake “sustainable” development
by revealing the details of eleven Michigan projects. Three thousand printed copies will be completed on Tuesday, 
May 31st. These handbooks will be distributed (not for sale) across 
the state of Michigan by Michigan Department of Environmental 
Quality representative and by our other project partners (see 
inside back cover of the handbook for a listing of our partners). 
Several hundred copies will be mailed to local municipalities 
and developers. Several hundred copies will also be distributed 
outside of Michigan as the authors travel to related conferences 
and trade shows (also not for sale) in the next few months. Case 
study contact persons will also receive approximately 5 copies 
each. Other issues as appropriate: 
 Due to the conflict between the deadline for this award submission 
and our expected print delivery date, the version of the handbook 
submitted for your consideration is a spiral-bound replica. The 
3,000 perfect-bound copies currently being printed will have higher 
resolution images, a more sophisticated binding, and more interesting 
paper (recycled, of course).
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