This year’s Top 10 states for LEED, released by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), include more than 468 million gross square-feet of LEED-certified space. LEED-certified buildings use less energy, water, reduce carbon emissions and save money for families, businesses and the community.

“Over the past 25 years, the U.S. Green Building Council, its member companies and the green building community have come together to make our planet stronger, greener and more sustainable through LEED,” says Mahesh Ramanujam, president and CEO, USGBC. “These Top 10 states are examples of how we can create lasting, measurable change and improve the quality of life for everyone in our communities. A better future requires a universal living standard that leaves no one behind—and that future would simply not be possible without the extraordinary work being done in these states.”

  • Illinois, the number one state for LEED certification in 2018, has certified 172 green building projects representing 5.31 square feet of LEED-certified space per resident.
  • USGBC calculates the list using per capita figures to allow for a fair comparison of the level of green building taking place among states with significant differences in population and number of overall buildings. Notable projects that certified in each state in 2018 include:
  • Illinois: Northwestern Medicine Lake Forest Hospital is LEED Silver and part of a redeveloped campus that opened in March 2018 with over 700 physicians providing primary, specialty and emergency care.
  • Massachusetts: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. School, LEED Platinum, served as a prototype for the Cambridge Green Schools Initiative and changed the way the district thinks about building energy while also using its design as a teaching tool for students.
  • Colorado: Jones Hall at the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind is a historic building that achieved LEED Gold and provides a place for visiting families to stay as well as a repository of resources for students across the state.
  • Washington: The LEED Platinum Seattle Fire Station 22 was designed to support the wellbeing of its firefighters while finding ways to reuse and conserve non-potable water to meet the station’s needs.
  • Washington
  • New York: Albany Damien Center Residences is a LEED Gold housing project that has provided long-term housing stability to more than 400 chronically homeless people.
  • Virginia: Operation Smile’s Global Headquarters used LEED to reflect its own commitment to make the world a better place during the construction of its new LEED Gold office in Virginia Beach.
  • Texas: The LEED Silver Austin Animal Kennel expanded its facility to meet the city’s growing “no kill” community and provides an additional 44 kennel spaces as well as play yards and adoption rooms.
  • Texas
  • California: The Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) achieved LEED Gold for Building 301 using LEED v4.1; LEED is used across JPL’s campus to compare progress and continuously improve building performance while also meeting federal guiding principles for sustainable buildings as a contractor to NASA.
  • Maryland: The Merriweather Post Pavilion Stagehouse is a LEED Silver home-away-from-home for touring artists playing at the iconic venue and reflects many of the artists’ environmental values.
  • Hawaii: Hawaii Convention Center achieved LEED Gold and is focused on measuring environmental performance to improve visitor experience and uses Arc to track its sustainability efforts.
  • Hawaii

While the Top 10 recognizes progress at the building level, LEED is also now used to measure sustainability performance at the city and community levels. This year, nine of the Top 10 states are also home to LEED-certified cities and communities, including Chicago, Seattle, Austin, and San Diego County. There are currently more than 137 registered and certified LEED cities and communities around the world, representing more than 50 million people.

For more information on the U.S. Green Building Council, visit usgbc.org.

This story originally appeared in the July 2019 issue of SNIPS magazine.