Enjoy an excerpt of this essential column, and join us as we look forward to a bright and prosperous 2010.
"... While it is easy for me to state that this makeover is the best thing to happen to our industry in the 30 years I've been practicing architecture, I have a growing concern that we may miss the real opportunity if we continue to focus on green scorecards. There are thousands of definitions of sustainability, and I do not want to create another, but clearly we must find ways to do more with less water, energy and materials.
We must change the discussion and stop promoting projects that use what are now best practices - recycled content, walk-off mats and all the other low-hanging fruit on the LEED scorecard - which have modest impact on energy and water use. This must change. There is no way, going forward, that we can afford the luxury of buildings that don't make real reductions in water and energy use. True water and energy reduction must become our priority, and I am not referring to buying renewable energy credits or other offsets. This is a building-by-building, project-by-project requirement to reduce onsite energy and water use in every possible way.
We must change the mindset where only a LEED building is viewed as a sustainable building. If, for whatever reasons, a client or a project team decides not to pursue LEED certification, it doesn't mean that designers cannot deliver a highly sustainable project. In fact, given the freedom to pursue sustainability and not chase points or mandated rating requirements, design teams might discover some very unique solutions. I believe that scale is the key to our sustainable future, and we need every building to have a sustainable quotient regardless if a LEED rating is achieved or not.
As we begin another year, I am sure that everyone is glad to have 2009 behind us. We have a great opportunity to open and honestly report the performance of projects and share lessons learned. We can collectively require meaningful reductions in energy and water performance for all sustainable projects, including ones that are not seeking LEED certification. I am hoping that in the next decade we embrace energy reduction and regionalism like we did scorecards because our future requires thousands of sustainable projects, versus hundreds, to make a difference." For the full article, visit ED+C's Perspectives on Sustainable Design.
Dan Heinfeld FAIA, LEED AP and President of LPA Inc. For more than 30 years, he has led the design direction of the firm. Since 1985, LPA has been recognized with more than 150 AIA national, state and components awards that promote the important role that sustainability has in the process to inform design. LPA provides services in architecture, planning, interior design, landscape architecture, engineering, signage and graphics.