Abstract

The study aims to suggest sampling structures to avoid sacrificial pseudoreplication in the evaluation of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)-certified projects. The sampling includes two structures that exclude sacrificial pseudoreplication and one structure that leads to sacrificial pseudoreplication: (i) The state is the sampling frame in which LEED projects are treated as primary sampling units; (ii) The US is the sampling frame, the state is the primary sampling unit in which LEED projects are treated as evaluation units; and (iii) The US is the sampling frame in which LEED projects are pooled from different states and treated as primary sampling units. The three sampling structures are applied to the evaluation of the Silver-to-Gold cross-certification performances of LEEDv3 for new construction and LEEDv3 for existing buildings. The same cross-certification strategy was revealed if either structure (i) or structure (ii) was applied, while it was poorly estimated and misinterpreted if structure (iii) was applied, i.e., sacrificial pseudoreplication had occurred.

Highlights

  • We first start with statistical terminology necessary for explaining the study (Table 1)

  • For newly constructed projects certified under Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)-NCv3, four of the six categories were employed, in which energy and atmosphere (EA) was the most popular propelling category; SS, environmental quality (EQ), and in design (ID) were the intermediately popular propelling categories; and water efficiency (WE) and material and resources (MR) were completely unpopular categories

  • For renovated projects certified under LEED-EBv3, all categories were employed, in which SS and EQ were the most popular propelling categories; WE and EA were the intermediately popular propelling categories; and MR and IO were the least popular propelling categories

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Summary

Objectives

The goal of the present study is to correct the statistical malaise over evaluating and interpreting the LEED certification process

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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