LaFontaine Automotive earns Gold Certification

LaFontaine Automotive Group earned received their Gold Certification, Feb. 18. The new dealership, a 63,000-square-foot facility opened on June 2, 2008, and home for Buick, Pontiac, GMC, and Cadillac, is located on 24 acres on M-59/Highland Road just west of Hickory Ridge Road.
The $15-million facility is the first GM dealership in the country to qualify for the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification under the Green Building Rating System which is a nationally accepted benchmark for design, construction, and operation of high performance green buildings under guidelines established by the U.S. Green Building Council. The dealership received45 out of the 46 eligible points and only were required to get 39 points to receive Gold (LEED) Certification, the highest possible level.
The Green Building Rating System is designed to reward best practices and assist the owners in solving problems, improving performance, and maintaining the condition of their buildings over lengthier periods of time. This success is recognized and ‘points? are awarded based on whether those standards are met in each of the six key areas of human and environmental health:
? Sustainable Site Development – when developing the site they head to be sensitive to encroaching on agricultural lands, comprising existing wildlife, and exacerbating local and regional erosion.
? Water Efficiency – a special car wash system recycles 85 percent of the water otherwise wasted by conventional car washes.
Indigenous plants are used for landscaping because they require less water. A roof storm water retention system provides water for the landscape irrigation. The storm water is pretreated prior to entering a nearby clay-lined retention pond.
For both customers and the facility’s 150 employees, low-flush toilets reduce the amount of the water used per flush.Integrated paving products also reduce water runoff.
? Energy and Atmosphere – the facility’s centerpiece is a $600,000, 64-well geothermal system that heats and cools the building by capturing energy stored in the earth 350 feet below the building. The system transfers energy to and from the facility with closed loops of fluid-filled tubes. Eighty-five skylights fill the facility with natural light and reduce the need for artificial lighting; special prisms magnify the light for even more efficiency.
Sophisticated photocells and computer-controlled lighting helps ensure lights are turned off in unused areas and can turn off artificial lighting when there is enough daylight to illuminate the building. Motion sensing that will turn off the lights if there is no movement in the room. The interior and exterior lights are on timers to insure lights are not left on. Also, automatically diarists satellite and adjusts for day light savings and weather.
A smart energy management system allows dialing in off site to allow checking efficiency and turnoff lights. Efficient T5 fluorescent lighting provides more light using half the energy of conventional lighting.
The roof was designed white to absorb the heat and heat index. Green belts throughout the facility exterior and colored paving material reduce the ‘heat island? effect of the facility.
The service department fills customers? vehicle tires with nitrogen vs. conventional compressed air because the unique properties of nitrogen can provide fuel-economy benefits. Also, because it does not permeate porous tire walls as quickly, nitrogen can keep tires properly inflated longer, contributing to more even tire wear and, therefore, longer tire life. 3M composite product was used as wheel weights vs. the traditional lead base wheel weights. A windmill generates energy to pump retention pond water for irrigation.
? Materials and Resources – heavy use of recycled content supplied by firms within a 500-mle radius of the facility to promote local economies and cut down on transportation-related energy. Exterior masonry is 40-percent recycled content. Recycled aluminum is used on the building’s exterior. Metal decking is at least 60-percent recycled content and metal framing is 2’percent recycled content.
? Indoor Environmental Quality – use of numerous low-emitting adhesives, sealants, paints and carpet systems. The service department’s 33 bay uses vegetable oil vs. caustic fluid in the hydraulic lifts.
The body shop paint booth uses a waterborne basecoat paint by PPG with zero volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions, and is one of the only two such paint booths in Michigan. Even the cleaning system for the paint wands does not generate VOCs.
Twelve vehicle detailing bays use green cleaning products.All cleaning products used to clean the building are green, and four dumpsters provide recycling for customers. All products used at events are recycled or organic. Golf shirts bought back emissions for Grand Opening event, and natural, light-filled spaces promote a more pleasing and productive work environment.
? Innovation and Design Process – provided a building that creates a healthy environment for people to work and shop for automobiles.
The LaFontaine Automotive Group features 14 franchises including Buick, Pontiac, GMC, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge, Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Scion, Suzuki and Kia, and a Pre-Owned Inventory of 500 plus domestic and imported vehicles.