9 February 2010, Portland, Oregon - Icebreaker, the
Wellington, New Zealand-based outdoor company that claims to have invented the
natural and technical outdoor merino apparel category, today announced it had
received LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) gold
certification for its U.S. headquarters in Northwest Portland from the U.S.
Green Building Council’s Green Building Rating System.
“We are very proud to receive LEED gold certification for
our headquarters, and thank everyone who helped us achieve this honourable
distinction,” said Russ Hopcus, President of Icebreaker USA. “This
certification shows how Icebreaker is genuinely committed to reducing our
environmental footprint by thinking long-term, designing sustainability into
our products and packaging, and improving our business operations to reduce
waste and pollution.”
LEED promotes a whole-building approach to sustainability by
recognizing performance in five key areas: sustainable site development, water
savings, energy efficiency, materials selection and indoor environmental
quality.
Icebreaker’s U.S. headquarters, located at 1330 NW 14th
Avenue, opened in December 2009 and was designed by Portland’s GBD Architects,
Inc. with various green features. All of the wood in the space is either
reclaimed or FSC Certified (responsibly forested woods). Low VOC paints and
coatings were used throughout. No urea-formaldehyde glue, a known cancer
causing substance, was used in the composite wood products. All systems office
furniture is Green-Guard Certified, meeting strict VOC standards. The
headquarters was also designed to maximize natural daylight, and to be as open
as possible to inspire employee collaboration.
The space includes many touches from Icebreaker’s New
Zealand home, including conference rooms named after Kiwi sheep stations and
imagery of the country’s spectacular Southern Alps, where its merino fibre is
produced.
Icebreaker moved its U.S. operations from Ketchum, Idaho, to
Portland in 2007, the same year it opened its first Touch_Lab store in North
America, which is across the street from Powell’s on NW 11th Avenue and
Burnside Street. In 2008, the company began a product traceability program
called “Baacode,” which enables consumers to track their garments back to the
farms that raised the sheep that provided the merino fibre used in their
apparel. Earlier this month the company announced it will open its first
factory store in the U.S. in Woodburn, Oregon, in April 2010.