
LEED v5 Sustainable Sites: Nature Meets Practice
GreenCE’s mission is to support the necessary transition to a sustainable built environment by empowering design professionals to address the environmental, economic, and social impacts of buildings. GreenCE’s course catalog includes LEED exam preparation, continuing education to maintain your AIA or LEED credential, as well as specialty education focused on topics such as ADA/Barrier-Free requirements. We are committed to designing the highest quality continuing education programs in the construction industry.
The land beneath our buildings tells a story of disrupted ecosystems, rising temperatures, and communities bearing the weight of inequitable development. LEED v5 Sustainable Sites gives design professionals the framework to write a different one, where buildings restore habitat, manage water responsibly, cool overheated neighborhoods, and create spaces where people and wildlife thrive.
This course unpacks every prerequisite and credit in the LEED v5 Sustainable Sites category, connecting technical requirements to the ecological science, public health research, and equity principles that drive them. Whether you're pursuing LEED certification or simply committed to designing buildings that do more than meet code, this course will change how you think about the site itself. Your buildings shape the land they sit on. Make that relationship count.
- Explore how LEED v5 Sustainable Sites prerequisites and credits including the Minimized Site Disturbance Prerequisite, Biodiverse Habitat Credit, and Rainwater Management Credit guide design professionals in protecting ecological systems and reducing downstream flooding impacts on frontline communities.
- Examine the LEED v5 Heat Island Reduction Credit and Enhanced Resilient Site Design Credit to understand how design professionals can mitigate climate-driven hazards and reduce urban heat disparities for people and ecosystems.
- Identify how the LEED v5 Accessible Outdoor Space Credit and Light Pollution Reduction Credit support outdoor environments that promote human health, community connection, and wildlife protection.
- Recognize the role of equity, ecological science, and climate resilience in shaping modern sustainable site design and apply that understanding to real-world site design decisions.





