DPWH gets DOJ nod to adopt green building regulation

Coral City in Sto Tomas Batangas

 

MANILA, Philippines – Following the destruction caused by typhoon Yolanda, the Department of Justice (DOJ) allowed the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) to push through with its plan of adopting a green building regulation in the National Building Code of the Philippines (NBCP).

In a nine-page legal opinion made public Wednesday, Justice Secretary Leila De Lima said the DPWH has the authority to issue implementing rules and regulations for effective implementation of the NBCP.

With such power, De Lima said the authority includes the power to amend or revise under the doctrine of necessary implications.

Section 203 of both the NBCP and its IRR explicitly authorizes changes and/or amendments to existing referral codes.

“Indeed, the provisions of the referral codes should be allowed to evolve to respond to the needs of the changing times,” De Lima said in her legal opinion.

“Verily, amending all the pertinent provisions of existing referral codes to include the green building regulation may be considered as one of the needed changes envisioned at the time of the adoption of the law,” she said.

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– Tetch Tores-Tupas

Featured on Inquirer, 27 November 2013

Green architect unveils ‘Coral City’ housing

Coral City

 

A Filipino-Italian company advocating green architecture has proposed the construction of houses and buildings that can quickly adapt and withstand typhoons, floods and other calamities due to climate change

Italian architect Romolo Nati, executive chairman and CEO of Italpinas Euroasian Design and Eco-Development (ITPI), has introduced his Philippine coral-inspired designs to encourage Filipinos to build typhoon and flood-resistant shelters in the aftermath of destructive Typhoon Maring

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Featured on Carbon New, 06 September 2013

On Business World: Calamities influencing design

From Business World: 29 August 2013

 In a world that is constantly being plagued by natural calamities, ITPI proposes natural design solutions to come up with shelters that resist Mother Nature’s fury.

ITALPINAS Euroasian Design and Eco-Development Corp. (ITPI) cited the need for “construction of houses and buildings that can… withstand typhoons, floods and other calamities due to climate change.”

Italian architect Romolo V. Nati, ITPI’s executive chairman and chief executive officer, said in the statement that his company’s “Philippine coral-inspired” designs are intended partly “to encourage Filipinos to build typhoon- and flood-resistant shelters in the aftermath of destructive tropical storm Maring.”

As of least 25 people died and P668.95 million worth of infrastructure and crops in Luzon were damaged or destroyed by floods and rains spawned by storm Maring (international name: Trami) last week.

ITPI’s design bagged the “Special Energy Award,” besting 200 entries from 50 countries, in the Design Against the Elements (DAtE) global competition in 2011, according to the statement.

Titled “Coral City,” ITPI’s design features “integration of renewable energy production and architecture.”

 

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http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=Property&title=Calamities-influencing-design&id=75646

 

Grazie e a presto!