Benefits of good design not given enough attention: Closing the Loop

Benefits of good design not given enough attention: Closing the Loop
Jessie RichardsonDecember 7, 2020

Despite plentiful evidence about the positive impacts of good building design, developers and the public are not getting the picture, a group of building industry experts has concluded.

Partners of the CRC for Low Carbon Living's Closing the Loop Project spoke about the knowledge gap at workshops held in conjunction with this year's Green Cities conference.

Head of knowledge and sustainability at HASSELL Brett Pollard said people aren't taking advantage of the benefits of good design, despite the evidence and research available.

"Ultimately if you construct a building that does not take advantage of the evidence, organisations and businesses are missing out on the opportunity to create workplaces that are healthier and more
effective," he said.

Design can impact financial, environmental and human factors in a business, according to research by Professor Vivian Loftness of Carnegie Mellon University, who spoke at the conference. According to Lauren Haas, Australasia Sustainability Manager for Brookfield Multiplex, poor design can also have a negative impact.

"For business, a low performance building can mean disengaged employees with low performance, higher levels of absenteeism and many thousands of dollars wasted per year in lost productivity," she says.

"If office workers, students or patients in hospitals are more informed about what can be achieved through high performance buildings they can help drive demand for these buildings."

Industry Director of Building Engineering at AECOM Lester Partridge cited Loftness' presentation at the conference.

"Vivian Loftness showed us a very powerful example in the workshop by comparing the decision making processes for a car, laptop and a building. People know more about the features of
a car which may only be owned for 3-5 years or a laptop which might last two or three years than they do about the features of a building that will last in excess of 30 years.

"The conversation about high performance buildings needs to change and people need to be more aware of the true cost of buildings."

The Closing the Loop project intends to create an evidence base for the benefits of sustainable design, with an assessment and analysis system which helps decision making around commercial and public buildings.

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Design

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