Red List building materials
The Living Building Challenge Red List contains chemicals commonly used in building materials that have been designated as harmful to "health and the environment". The International Living Future Institute created the list in 2006, and is the only organization that uses the term "Red List".
Living Building Challenge Red List
Chemicals on the red list may not be included in materials used in construction that seeks to meet the criteria of the Living Building Challenge. According to ILFI, the list is composed of materials that should be phased out of production due to health concerns. The list is now updated annually.The 2024 LBC red list has over twelve thousand items each identified with a CAS Registry Number. This list includes the following chemical groups:
- Alkylphenols
- Antimicrobials
- Asbestos Compounds
- Bisphenol A
- California-Banned Solvents
- Chlorinated polymers Including Polyvinyl chloride, Polyvinylidene chloride, Chloroprene, and CPVC
- Chlorobenzenes
- Chlorofluorocarbons and Hydrochlorofluorocarbons
- Formaldehyde
- Halogenated fire retardants
- Organotin Compounds
- Perfluorinated and Polyfluorinated Alkyl Substances / Perfluorinated compounds
- Phthalates
- Polychlorinated Biphenyls
- Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
- Short-Chain and Medium-Chain Chlorinated paraffins
- Toxic Heavy Metals including Arsenic, Cadmium, Chromium VI, Lead, and Mercury
- Volatile organic compounds in wet applied products
- Wood treatments containing creosote or pentachlorophenol
The Red List and the Living Building Challenge
The Living Building Challenge includes seven performance categories, titled as petals. The red list falls under the materials petal. A building project may not contain any of the Red List chemicals or chemical groups. There is an exception for small components in complex products. Each of these exceptions must include a written explanation. These exceptions will only be approved with a copy of the letter sent to the manufacturer stating that the product purchase does not ensure an endorsement. In addition, the final documentation must include a statement that asks the manufacturer to stop using the red list material or chemical. There are also temporary red list exceptions for numerous red list items for which viable alternatives are not yet commercially available.
Declare Product Label
is a product labeling program that relies on the LBC Red List as its primary basis for material evaluation. In creating a Declare label for a product, a manufacturer must disclose all of that product's intentionally added constituent chemicals to the designated 100 parts per million reporting threshold. Additionally, the manufacturer must report the extent to which that product is compliant with the Red List. The three compliance levels are: LBC Red List free, which means that the product is free of all red list ingredients; LBC compliant, which means that the product contains some chemicals that ILFI has designated as temporary red list exceptions; or declared, which means that the product is not compliant with the Red List or its temporary exceptions.
Products with Declare labels are included in the ILFI's .
A project compliant with the Living Building Challenge must include at least one Declare product for every 500 m2 of gross building area and must send Declare program information to at least 10 manufacturers not yet using Declare.