1. U.S. Green Building Council. (2018). LEED v4 for Homes Design and Construction.
Page 109, "MR Credit 2: Environmentally Preferable Products, Step-by-Step Guidance, Step 2. Identify EPPs": This section lists the attributes that qualify a product as an EPP. The first attribute listed is "Reused or salvaged materials," which directly applies to the salvaged brick in the scenario.
Page 111, Table 11, "MR Credit 2: Environmentally Preferable Products": This table outlines the points available for different product categories. For "Siding," it explicitly states that a project earns 0.5 points if ≥50% of the siding is an EPP, and 1 point if ≥90% is an EPP. The scenario meets the 50% threshold.
2. Krygiel, E., & Nies, B. (2016). Green BIM: Successful Sustainable Design with Building Information Modeling. Sybex. (Note: While a commercial book, its detailed breakdown of LEED credits is often used in university courseware for architecture and sustainable design).
Chapter 7, "Materials and Resources": This chapter explains that the EPP credit in LEED for Homes is calculated based on meeting percentage thresholds for specific building components, such as siding. It confirms that salvaged materials are a key compliance path and that calculations are based on the total component assembly, allowing for combinations of materials.