flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Download BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovation Report

Architects

Download BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovation Report

AEC and development firms share where new ideas come from, and what makes them click.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 9, 2021
Download BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovations Report

Have you wondered why some design ideas soar and others crash? Why clients embrace or reject a design concept? Whether your firm’s designs are trendsetters or followers?

To get answers to those and other design-related questions, Building Design+Construction polled the industry earlier this year, and received responses from 342 companies, most of which were architects, engineers, and contractors. The result of that survey is BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovations Report, whose 22 pages explore the complexities behind creating, pitching, and executing new ideas. 

The purpose of this report is to:

  • Uncover where AEC firms focus their efforts and how they stimulate new ideas;
  • Gauge how receptive owners and developers are to project ideas, and why;
  • Reveal which design trends—such as modularity, or the use of mass timber—are (or aren’t) catching on
  • Examine whether firms’ idea machines are keeping pace with the rate of change in business, lifestyle, and society.

Some takeaways from the report include:

  • The biggest factors that result in an innovation’s success or failure are cost, client buy-in, and communication;
  • Several typologies—offices, education, multifamily, healthcare—are glaring in their need for innovation, even as these same building types have been cited as design leaders in the past;
  • Contractors are often their clients’ gatekeepers when it comes to deciding which design innovations fly;
  • Mentoring and training are the primary catalysts within AEC firms for nurturing new ideas;
  • The coronavirus pandemic accelerated the need for design innovations, especially for indoor air quality and wellness.

The report makes clear that there’s no shortage of ideas or new products, and that “innovation” and “technology” are often thought of together. 

 

Download BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovation Report (short registration required)

  

Related Stories

| Oct 27, 2014

Top 10 green building products for 2015

Among the breakthrough products to make BuildingGreen's annual Top-10 Green Building Products list are halogen-free polyiso insulation and a high-flow-rate biofiltration system.

| Oct 27, 2014

Studio Gang Architects designs residential tower with exoskeleton-like exterior for Miami

Jeanne Gang's design reinvents the Florida room with shaded, asymmetrical balconies.

| Oct 26, 2014

New York initiates design competition for upgrading LaGuardia, Kennedy airports

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that the state would open design competitions to fix and upgrade New York City’s aging airports. But financing construction is still unsettled.

| Oct 26, 2014

Study asks: Do green schools improve student performance?

A study by DLR Group and Colorado State University attempts to quantify the student performance benefits of green schools.

Sponsored | | Oct 24, 2014

Infographic: 5 key considerations for securing modular workspace

Keep these five considerations in mind for your next project that may benefit from modular space. SPONSORED CONTENT 

| Oct 24, 2014

Herzog & de Meuron reveals plans for redesign of Roche pharmaceutical campus in Germany

The project includes the addition of a 205-meter-high tower and research center, as well as the renovation of an historic office building designed by Swiss architect Otto R. Salvisber.

Sponsored | | Oct 23, 2014

From slots to public safety: Abandoned Detroit casino transformed into LEED-certified public safety headquarters

First constructed as an office for the Internal Revenue Service, the city's new public safety headquarters had more recently served as a temporary home for the MGM Casino. SPONSORED CONTENT

| Oct 23, 2014

Santiago Calatrava-designed church breaks ground in Lower Manhattan

Saturday marked the public "ground blessing" ceremony for the Saint Nicholas National Shrine, the Greek Orthodox Church destroyed on 9/11 by the collapse of the World Trade Center towers. 

| Oct 23, 2014

Prehistory museum's slanted roof mimics archaeological excavation [slideshow]

Mimicking the unearthing of archaeological sites, Henning Larsen Architects' recently opened Moesgaard Museum in Denmark has a planted roof that slopes upward out of the landscape.

| Oct 23, 2014

China's 'weird' buildings: President Xi Jinping wants no more of them

During a literary symposium in Beijing, Chinese President Xi Jinping urged architects, authors, actors, and other artists to produce work with "artistic and moral value."

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Adaptive Reuse

Empty mall to be converted to UCLA Research Park

UCLA recently acquired a former mall that it will convert into the UCLA Research Park that will house the California Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy at UCLA and the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering, as well as programs across other disciplines. The 700,000-sf property, formerly the Westside Pavilion shopping mall, is two miles from the university’s main Westwood campus. Google, which previously leased part of the property, helped enable and support UCLA’s acquisition.


Geothermal Technology

Rochester, Minn., plans extensive geothermal network

The city of Rochester, Minn., home of the famed Mayo Clinic, is going big on geothermal networks. The city is constructing Thermal Energy Networks (TENs) that consist of ambient pipe loops connecting multiple buildings and delivering thermal heating and cooling energy via water-source heat pumps.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021