EstatePass
Contract AdminProcedureshard13% of exam part

For LEED certification, which of the following best describes the 'commissioning' process?

Correct Answer

B) Systematic verification of building systems performance

Commissioning in LEED is a systematic process of verifying that building systems are designed, installed, and functioning according to the owner's requirements and design intent. It ensures optimal performance of mechanical, electrical, and other systems.

Answer Options
A
Training of building maintenance staff
B
Systematic verification of building systems performance
C
Installation of energy monitoring equipment
D
Final inspection by the building owner

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Commissioning in LEED is indeed a systematic verification process that ensures all building systems perform according to design specifications and owner requirements. This comprehensive process involves testing, adjusting, and documenting the performance of HVAC, electrical, plumbing, and other building systems. It goes beyond simple inspection to include functional testing and performance verification. The commissioning process is critical for achieving LEED certification as it demonstrates that sustainable design features are actually functioning as intended.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Training of building maintenance staff

Training maintenance staff is typically part of the commissioning deliverables, but it's not the commissioning process itself. Training occurs after the systems have been verified and tested through the commissioning process.

Option C: Installation of energy monitoring equipment

Installing energy monitoring equipment may be one component of commissioning, but it doesn't encompass the full commissioning process. Commissioning involves testing all building systems, not just installing monitoring equipment.

Option D: Final inspection by the building owner

While building owner inspection may be part of the overall process, commissioning is much more comprehensive and systematic than a simple final inspection. It involves detailed testing and verification by qualified commissioning professionals, not just a walkthrough by the owner.

Memory Technique

Think 'Commission = Confirm' - commissioning confirms that building systems work correctly through systematic verification and testing

Reference Hint

Look up LEED Reference Guide sections on Energy and Atmosphere prerequisites, specifically the Fundamental Commissioning and Enhanced Commissioning credits

Was this explanation helpful?

More Contract Admin Questions

A project experiences a 30-day delay due to unusually severe weather. The contract includes a liquidated damages clause of $1,000 per day for delays. If the weather delay is excusable but not compensable, what liquidated damages apply?

A commercial project requires a total of 12 inspections. The building department charges $85 per inspection for the first 5 inspections, $65 for inspections 6-10, and $45 for any additional inspections. What is the total inspection fee?

What document must be posted at the job site before a Certificate of Occupancy can be issued for a commercial building?

A mixed-use development requires a variance for reduced setbacks. The property is located within 500 feet of a hospital. What additional consideration must be addressed?

A LEED project requires tracking of regional materials. Materials are considered regional if they are extracted, harvested, or recovered, as well as manufactured within what distance of the project site?

An indemnification clause in a construction contract typically requires the contractor to:

A property owner wants to convert a single-family home into a duplex in an area zoned for single-family residential use. The conversion meets all building codes but violates density requirements. What approval is needed?

As-built drawings are typically required to be submitted:

AIA Document A401 is primarily used for:

A general contractor is building a 12,000 square foot commercial warehouse. The building permit fee is calculated at $8.50 per $1,000 of construction value. If the project value is $2,400,000, what is the building permit fee?

People Also Study

Related Study Resources

Practice More Contractor Exam Questions

Access all practice questions with progress tracking and adaptive difficulty to pass your Florida General Contractor exam.

Start Practicing

Disclaimer: EstatePass is an independent exam preparation platform and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any state contractor licensing board, the Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB), the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), NASCLA, Pearson VUE, PSI, or any government agency. Exam requirements, fees, and regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with your state's licensing board before making decisions. Information shown was last verified on the dates indicated and may not reflect the most recent changes.