insulated metal panel

Trending Towards Sustainability
Expert Analysis, Sustainability
Trending Towards Sustainability
March 2, 2018 at 3:11 pm 0

Insulated metal panels are at the forefront of sustainable building materials.

From plastics to electronics, there is growing awareness about what goes into the products that make up our world. The built environment is seeing the effects as well, which are reflected in new, more holistic sustainable building standards.

According to the EPA, people spend about 90 percent of their lives in buildings, and until recently, building owners, architects, and designers have had very little say in what goes into the building materials. Today, however, the way we make decisions about designing and constructing is evolving. Design-build teams are recognizing that buildings are more than just places that we occupy; they are the spaces where generations of people live, work and play.

For years, insulated metal panels have been the go-to solution for highly efficient, cost-saving green building enclosures. Their superior thermal efficiency reduces moisture and mold, which can be harmful to occupants, as well as heating and cooling costs. As an all-in-one product, insulated metal panels offer faster installation, less construction waste, and reduced maintenance. These performance and sustainability benefits already lend insulated metal panels LEED credit opportunities.

Fueled by building owners, new sustainable ideas are raising the standards for design-build teams—as well as manufacturers. The sustainable building industry is now moving the needle even further toward healthy building materials. We are rethinking not only how our buildings can be more efficient, but also how every product we use can be more sustainable.

Raising the Bar

The latest LEED standards are primarily driving this more holistic approach to measuring a building’s overall effect on health and the environment. The U.S. Green Building Council released LEED v4 in 2013, and the changes are taking the healthier material trend mainstream.

Overall, LEED v4 raises the bar on sustainable building. Some of the major changes are an expanded focus on energy and materials. With high R-values, many insulated metal panels produced today can offer build teams more credit opportunities for whole-building energy efficiency. Prerequisites also require greater transparency of product material contents as well as the manufacturing process to help building owners, architects, and designers make more informed decisions about what goes onto — and into — buildings.

To achieve LEED v4 credits, environmental product declarations and health product declarations are two voluntary tools that can help building owners, designers, and architects identify a more sustainable insulated metal panel. An environmental product declaration states the environmental impact through the product life cycle, from manufacturing to recycling. A health product declaration discloses any potentially harmful chemicals in a product. It compares product ingredients to a set “hazard” list based on information from government agencies.  

Building product manufacturers are beginning to take steps to reduce and eliminate these chemical ingredients from their products. One specific ingredient is halogen: a chemical compound that consists of five elements on the periodic table that can be harmful to human health and the environment over time. In insulated metal panels, the ingredients are often used within the foam core as an economical and effective fire retardant.

Halogenated flame retardants were historically added to products to inhibit ignition or spread of flames. Flame retardants delay the spread of fire by suppressing the chemical reactions in the flame by the formation of a protective layer on the material’s surface. Halogenated flame retardants are compounds that contain chlorine and bromine (halogens), which are classified as persistent bioaccumulative toxins. These toxins can build up in organisms and the building environment, and have been shown to negatively affect the following biological functions: neurological development, reproductive system, thyroid hormone disruption, and liver toxicity.

Where Do We Go from Here?

We are already seeing restrictions on products containing halogen throughout Europe and in parts of the United States. Looking at these trends, the use of halogen-free building materials is on the horizon for insulated metal panels. Already earning high marks in sustainability, insulated metal panels with halogen-free foam will provide building owners with a safer occupant environment and offer architects enhanced performance and sustainability metrics.   

Kim Rager, CENTRIA product manager – insulated metal panels, oversees strategic product planning, sales strategy, and market analysis for Formawall with halogen-free foam, CENTRIA’s premier line of insulated metal panels, as well as industrial/commercial foam products.

CONTINUE READING ...
Taking Moisture off the Table
Design Innovation
Taking Moisture off the Table
February 20, 2018 at 3:43 pm 0

Iowa homeless shelter marries envelope aesthetics with high performance. 

Rob Smith’s design team faced a dilemma.

They needed to identify a design solution for a new homeless shelter in Des Moines, Iowa that projected a “caring institution without looking like a Taj Mahal” and still stick the landing on key envelope performance goals.

“We wanted to achieve as high an R-value as possible without insulating the stud space,” Smith explains. “It’s all about water vapor. We wanted to eliminate dew point as an issue.” (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
Wall Weatherproofing with IMPs
Panel Discussion
Wall Weatherproofing with IMPs
July 31, 2017 at 6:50 pm 0

Making the case for insulated metal panels as the single-source solution.

Building envelopes are typically a series of materials separating the building interior climate from the exterior. These materials must be connected from wall to roof, and wall to floor/foundation, and they need to encapsulate the building and perform specific functions to resist moisture in liquid and vapor states, air infiltration and heat flow. (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
America’s Game
Panel Discussion
America’s Game
January 31, 2017 at 9:46 pm 0

CENTRIA products are showcased on National Football League stadiums nationwide.  

The first stadium of its size to utilize a retractable roof, NRG Stadium will play host to Super Bowl LI on Sunday, February 5th. The grandiose, high-performance venue will serve as an appropriate backdrop to a clash between two of the NFL’s most dynamic offenses, not to mention the pomp and circumstance that coincides with the world’s greatest sporting spectacle.

Houston’s NRG Stadium is one of dozens across the United States to feature CENTRIA exterior metal building products. The flashy metallic façade showcases over 250,000 square feet of CENTRIA’s flagship product, Formawall Dimension Series insulated metal panels (IMPs) in multiple shades of silver. Other CENTRIA products include IW Series single-skin concealed fastener panels and nearly 175,000 square feet of EcoScreen perforated screenwall. (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
No More Moisture
Design Innovation
No More Moisture
August 28, 2016 at 6:11 pm 0

CENTRIA system revitalizes high-rise multifamily property. 

“It’s dry.”

To the residents of 8330 On the River, an 18-story, 226,000 square foot apartment building in Detroit, Mich., no two words have ever sounded sweeter.

The 280-unit complex, built in the 1970s on the banks of the Detroit River, has struggled for years with water infiltration after every hard rain. Not just a little leakage. But a lot.

“It wasn’t like just one or two units had a leak,” reports James T. Pappas, AIA, president of Fusco, Shaffer & Pappas, Inc. Architects and Planners, the 52 year-old design firm based in Ferndale, Mich. that was hired to solve the water problems. (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
Making Waves
Design Innovation
Making Waves
May 10, 2016 at 3:00 pm 0

Great Lakes Research Center showcases the best in metal wall panel technology. 

 Stationed on the shores of the Keweenaw Waterway to Lake Superior, Michigan Tech’s new, three-story Great Lakes Research Center (GLRC) is a one-stop shop for any and all scientific research relating to the Great Lakes—the largest surface freshwater system in the world. The facility hosts collaborations between a number of university departments researching air-water interactions, biogeochemistry, hydrodynamics, fisheries, and storm-water management, amongst other subjects.

(more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
Innovation Through Integration
Design Innovation
Innovation Through Integration
March 14, 2016 at 1:27 pm 0

Orthopedic Ambulatory Building sparks medical center design transformation. 

The Rush University Medical Center Orthopedic Ambulatory Building (OAB) was the first LEED Gold certified healthcare facility in Chicago, IL. The five-story facility offers outpatient care in orthopedics and sports medicine and houses approximately 60 examinations rooms, x-ray and imaging suites, and physical and occupational therapy facilities, as well as state-of-the-art research facilities serving the medical center’s Department of Orthopedic Surgery. (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...
Transparency in Manufacturing
Sustainability
Transparency in Manufacturing
January 9, 2016 at 1:38 pm 0

CENTRIA’s environmental product declarations set a trailblazing path for product life cycles.

CENTRIA released its first series of environmental product declarations (EPDs) in 2014 to review five of the company’s high-performance insulated metal wall panels. The continuing trend toward EPDs offers a major advantage to not only the customers, but the industry as a whole.   (more…)

CONTINUE READING ...