What is SITES?

The Sustainable Sites Initiative Rating System offers a systematic approach to define, develop, enhance and restore landscapes with the goal of improving ecosystem services, community benefits and economic performance. It offers more focus on landscapes in comparison to LEED and aims to weave development of healthy natural ecosystems with the landscape of daily human activity via the spaces and places we inhabit, by providing a systematic, comprehensive set of guidelines to model development practices after healthy systems and processes. SITES was developed through a collaborative, interdisciplinary effort of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA), the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center at The University of Texas at Austin and the U.S. Botanic Garden. GBCI acquired SITES in 2015.

At the City of Austin, construction practices are moving closer towards sustainable and environmentally responsible design to include SITES-certified landscapes help to reduce water demand, filter and reduce storm water runoff, provide wildlife habitat, sequester carbon, reduce energy consumption, improve air quality, improve human health and increase outdoor recreation opportunities. 



How Does SITES Work?

10 Sections referenced from the SITES v2 Handbook

1. SITES

SITES requires careful planning and the protection of existing, functioning natural features that are unique, critical, sensitive, or threatened, such as farmlands, floodplains, wetlands, and wildlife habitats.

2. Pre-design assessment planning

Before design begins, an integrated design team must conduct a comprehensive site assessment of existing physical, biological, and cultural conditions that will inform planning and design.

3.Water

Projects that are designed to conserve water, maximize the use of precipitation, and protect water quality encourage strategies and technologies that restore and mimic natural systems.

4. Soil + Vegetation

Proper soil management as a design element and construction priority can serve as the foundation for robust vegetation, filtering pollutants and help prevent excess runoff, erosion, sedimentation, and flooding.

5. Minerals

The demolition, selection, procurement, and use of materials in site design and construction present considerable opportunities to decrease the amount of materials sent to landfills, to preserve natural resources, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and to support the use of sustainable building products.

6. Human health + Wellbeing

Outdoor opportunities for physical activity, restorative and aesthetic experiences, and social interaction are promoted. Projects are encouraged to address social equity in their design and development choices.

7.Construction

Sustainable construction encourages projects to protect air quality through low-emitting equipment, strive for a net-zero waste site, ensure healthy vegetation through soil restoration strategies, and protect receiving waters from polluted runoff and sedimentation

8.perations+ Maintenance

O+M promotes maintenance strategies that maximize the site’s long-term potential in providing ecosystem services. Strategies include reducing material disposal, ensuring long-term health of soil and vegetation, reducing pollution, conserving energy, and encouraging the use of renewable energy.

9.
Education+ Performance monitoring

SITES requires careful planning and the protection of existing, functioning natural features that are unique, critical, sensitive, or threatened, such as farmlands, floodplains, wetlands, and wildlife habitats.

10. Innovation or Exemplary Performance

Before design begins, an integrated design team must conduct a comprehensive site assessment of existing physical, biological, and cultural conditions that will inform planning and design.

WHY IS SITES IMPORTANT?

SITES is based on the concept of ecosystem services, the benefits provided by the natural ecological processes that support our daily lives. SITES-certified landscapes create ecologically resilient communities that are better able to withstand and recover from floods, droughts, wildfires and other catastrophic events. These projects help reduce water demand; conserve or restore natural resources; enable wildlife habitat; reduce energy consumption; and promote human health and wellbeing. SITES is designed for the future of the green building industry. As a complement to USGBC’s LEED green building rating system, SITES addresses the market’s need for a way to quantify and rate the sustainable use and performance of land sites.

DELL Medical District

Luci and Ian Family Garden at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center

Mary Elizabeth Park