Living Earth Realty Corp.'s ("LERCO") principals have conceived, financed, designed, built, marketed, managed and repositioned both commercial and residential real estate assets. LERCO's principals have seen 30 years of market conditions from booms to busts. LERCO's principals have the traditional and innovative skills needed to enhance any real estate asset or project and manifest environmental buildings.LERCO has investment capital specifically for developing and/or upgrading and retrofitting property in an environmentally appropriate way. Environmental buildings are structures that are constructed, maintained and operated in an environmentally, technologically and economically efficient manner. The goal of environmental buildings is to increase the productivity of all resources - human, energy and material. Whether the specific goal is to provide good indoor air quality, reduce energy consumption, integrate high speed telecommunications, minimize or eliminate the use of products that generate harmful gases, or receive additional income from the sale of recyclable waste, the basic objective is the same - to realize more out of one's resources than would otherwise have been possible. In this sense, environmental buildings are as much an economic as an ecological concept.
We are interested in projects that are at least 50,000 square feet in size. We are based in New York and are most interested in the New York metropolitan area. We will consider larger projects in other major metropolitan areas.
"The goal of environmental buildings is to increase the productivity of all resources - human, energy and material, Green development offers many benefits such as superior indoor air quality, efficient operation and maintenance utilizing waste recycling, fewer carbon and sulfur oxide emmissions, and maximum use of natural light". - Robert B. Stang
Please LIVING EARTH REALTY.
Audubon's Living Building Though loaded with environmentally conscious and energy efficient designs, the nine-story Audubon House in Lower Manhattan is no experiment. From basement composting to rooftop skylighting, this recycled Manhattan building is a whole-system success.
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