AEC firms that have been pushing wellness for years say they finally have a receptive ear with developers and owners. “Developers sell this; they see it as an exciting new trend,” says Colin Rohlfing, AIA, LEED AP, Vice President and Director of Sustainability with HDR.
The advice about wellness these firms dispense to clients in many cases has already been road tested to make their own workplaces healthier.
New Orleans-based Eskew+Dumez+Ripple positions wellness to clients as “asset opportunities,” such as yoga rooms and classes, with the goal of keeping employees active, says Ian O’Cain, AIA, Associate and Project Architect. One of his firm’s recent projects is a new 30,200-sf, two-story office building in New Orleans that serves as the corporate headquarters for general contractor Palmisano Group. The $9 million building includes an in-house gym and yoga studio, green space, an active stairwell, and a racetrack layout that creates a circulation path for employees. The narrow floorplate (55 feet wide) lets in lots of light.
One of DPR Construction’s recent projects is a new office space in Charlotte, N.C., for Little Diversified Architectural Consultants. Chris Gorthy, a Project Executive with DPR, says that before embarking on this project, Little’s management toured several WELL-certified buildings, including DPR’s office in Reston, Va.
Little’s Charlotte office takes up 60,000 sf over 2½ floors of an existing building. Wellness certification accounted for about $8 per sf of its $150 per sf cost (including furniture), according to Little CEO Phil Kuttner, AIA, LEED AP, WELL AP. Its wellness features include a monumental staircase, access to drinkable water throughout, and ample natural lighting. Gorthy says the biggest challenge was upgrading the building’s air quality, which required educating the project’s subcontractors, setting up a temporary containment system, and figuring out how the air system could be cleaned.
Kuttner says the company assigned a team within its company to monitor the office’s air and water quality, conduct employee satisfaction and productivity surveys, and issue reports.
Last November, Clark Construction became the first GC in the U.S. to be a Fitwel Champion. As part of that agreement, Clark has identified seven of its offices—in Baltimore and Bethesda, Md.; Chicago; Irvine, San Diego, and San Francisco, Calif.; and Seattle—to achieve Fitwel certification.
“This is a way for our company to break through to our employees about its concern for their healthier living,” says Fernando Arias, Clark’s Director of Sustainability. He observes, too, that many of his firm’s clients “are in the same boat” and are looking for ways to provide healthier work environments to their employees.
Take, for example, a mixed-used project in Maryland that Carr Properties is developing known as The Wilson & The Elm, a 930,000-sf building with 360,000 sf of office space and 460 for-rent apartments. (The demolished building this replaces had been known as The Apex.) Arias says the genesis of this project was a meeting he had in early 2018 with the developer’s CEO Oliver Carr, which led to a presentation about wellness that Arias’ team made to Carr executives last April.
Carr Properties now has four projects registered with Fitwel, and The Wilson & The Elm is likely to be the second certified, following another Clark-built project: Midtown Center in Washington, D.C.
What prompted Carr Properties to move toward wellness, says its Senior Director of Development Jason Bockenek, was “a combination of our outlook as long-term owners of real estate, and increased demand driven by sophisticated tenants, catering to a younger workforce.”
Related Stories
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Apr 19, 2017
Mercedes-Benz Stadium delayed until late August
The stadium is now scheduled to open on Aug. 26 in a preseason game between the Falcons and the Jaguars.
Multifamily Housing | Apr 18, 2017
Hanging Gardens-inspired CLT residential development proposed for Birmingham
Garden Hill will provide an ‘oasis-like residence’ for Birmingham’s growing, multicultural student population.
Green | Apr 14, 2017
Sunqiao looks to bring agriculture back to Shanghai’s urban landscape
Vertical farms will bring new farmable space to the city.
Sustainability | Apr 13, 2017
How to make a concrete bunker livable
SOM’s design for New York’s second Public Safety Answering Center leans on strategically placed windows and the outdoor environment.
Green | Apr 11, 2017
Passivhaus for high-rises? Research demonstrates viability of the stringent standards for tall residential buildings
A new study conducted by FXFOWLE shows that Building Teams can meet stringent Passivhaus performance standards with minimal impact to first cost and aesthetics.
Codes and Standards | Apr 6, 2017
Product-specific EPDs seen as key aid to earning green building credits
The product-specific EPDs allow designers to more quickly earn a LEED v4 credit in the Materials & Resources category.
Sustainability | Apr 4, 2017
Six connected CLT towers create an urban forest in India
The mixed-use towers would each rise 36 stories into the sky and connect via rooftop skybridges.
Urban Planning | Apr 3, 2017
Capturing the waterfront draw
People seem to experience a gravitation toward the water’s edge acutely and we traverse concrete and asphalt just to gaze out over an open expanse or to dip our toes in the blue stuff.
Mixed-Use | Mar 27, 2017
The Plant brings terrace-to-table living to Toronto
Curated Properties and Windmill Developments have teamed up to create a mixed-use building with food as the crux of the project.
Sustainability | Feb 28, 2017
Workplace wellbeing
Organizations are starting to realize that there are benefits to addressing employee wellbeing.