flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Gensler’s latest design forecast is also a call to action

Architects

Gensler’s latest design forecast is also a call to action

The firm urges the AEC industry to take the lead in creating a fairer, cleaner built environment that faces many obstacles.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 27, 2022
Financial services is one of the sectors that Gensler examines in its Design Forecast for 2022. Images: Gensler
Financial services is one of 28 practices that Gensler probes for trends in its recently released Design Forecast 2022. Images and charts: Gensler

Social equity and climate change are the elephants in the room hovering over Gensler’s Design Forecast for 2022, which the giant architecture firm released this week.

Drawing from a wide range of research sources, including its own, Gensler maps out what it sees as the top trends and strategies for its 28 practice areas, organized under the headings Cities, Work, Lifestyle, and Health. (The Report can be downloaded at https://bit.ly/3ILhHxf.)

The report is, in the main, optimistic, with dollops of wishful thinking. But Gensler, which generated $1.235 billion in revenue last year, is also clear-eyed and fact-informed about the challenges that lie ahead and the extent that design can help meet and exceed them. “An ongoing resilience is defining the built environment,” write the firm’s co-CEOs Diane Hoskins, FAIA, IIDA, and Andy Cohen, FAIA.

 

The report advocates more renewable energy in building design.
The report makes its pitch for more renewable energy to lower buildings' carbon footprint.
 

They see a world where innovation is accelerating, where cities are becoming more walkable and greener, where holistic design places greater emphasis on enhancing human experience, and where places “honor local context, while considering the health of occupants and planet alike.” To that end, Gensler has taken action to improve long-term resilience and sustainability of the construction industry’s supply chain by developing a new “blueprint” for specifying lower-carbon products and promoting locally extracted and manufactured materials. Gensler’s stated goal is to achieve carbon neutrality in all its work within a decade. “Never has there been a greater opportunity for the building industry to act on climate change,” the Report states.

STARTLING STATISTICS

The 91-page Design Forecast is a reservoir of information, some of which are likely to stop readers in their tracks. For example, one of the Health sector’s demographic predicaments is that, for the first time in human history, more of the population will be over 65 years old than under 18. “This changes everything,” states Gensler, in terms of how healthcare facilities will be designed to function and serve their constituencies.

Another stat, based on Gensler’ own research, found that fewer than half of the people surveyed in 15 locations are optimistic about their cities’ futures. And in its prognosis for the future of the workplace, Gensler—again drawing from its own research—estimates that, at a time when demand for commercial real estate is in flux, top-performing companies are three times more likely to increase their real estate footprint.

Sprinkled throughout the Forecast are images of Gensler’s projects that, according to the firm, have responded to different needs. For example, the Nashville entertainment district Fifth + Broadway addresses what people want from cities: convenience, community, and accessibility. This mixed-use district blends retail, workplace, residential, restaurants, music, and sports. In Austin, a 140,000-sf built-to-suit office building for Whole Foods Market’s headquarters features extended floor plates that provide interior protection from the sun, public areas with biophilic elements, and an outdoor terrace that doubles as alternative workspace.

20 METATRENDS IN PLAY

Gensler’s Design Forecast revolves around its identification of metatrends that it believes will influence client demand and the firm’s work in each of its sectors and practices. Some of these trends are not new, but have yet to achieve fruition, or have been recast by events such as the COVID-19 pandemic or the so-called Great Resignation that is restirring the job market.

The metatrends, in short, are predicted as follows:

Cities:

 •A flexible public realm will deliver a more resilient future

•20-minute neighborhoods will drive equity

•Climate action demands will advance a path to net-zero

•Cities and organizations will refocus on regeneration and reuse

•Innovation districts will continue to thrive

 

What might comprise a more walkable community.
Gensler suggests the elements that might comprise more walkable neighborhoods. Source: The Conversation
 

Workplace:

•The workplace must be a compelling destination

•Experimentation, prototypes, and learning are the new normals

•The workspace will play a critical role in fostering equity and inclusion

•The new workspace ecosystem will include “third” spaces for such things as coworking

•Investments in health and well-being will deliver value for employees

 

Whole Foods Market's headquarters in Atlanta
Whole Foods Market's headquarters in Austin features health and wellness amenities.
 

Lifestyle:

•Belonging and placemaking will bring people together

•Amenities that drive community will be highly valued

•Flexibility will become a critical investment

•Digital and physical will blend to deliver connected experiences

•Places for gathering will become neighborhood catalysts

Health:

•Design for resilience, and design that elevates human health, are one in the same

•More of the population will be over 65 than under 18 for the first time in human history

•Science organizations will set the tone for how we act in climate change and health

•Existing aging building stock cannot be ignored

•Designing “to the edges” of society will create more welcoming and supportive environments.

The report does deeper dives into each of its practices to signal dynamics and to suggest viable design strategies. Take data centers, upon which the world’s information, research, financial, and ecommerce grids increasingly rely: while acknowledging that hyperscale data centers account for half of the total investment in that sector, Gensler hops on the edge bandwagon, proclaiming edge data centers as “the next frontier” that will feed the growth of next-generation technologies. This sector is also looking for ways to reduce its energy consumption and carbon footprint by embracing low-impact materials and energy recovery. Gensler talks up the benefits of designing data centers for immersive cooling systems that submerge servers in liquid.

 

Related Stories

Architects | Mar 11, 2016

Architecture for Humanity rebrands itself as Open Architecture Collaborative

With a new name, logo, and mission, the Open Architecture Collaborative is seeking a fresh start. 

Architects | Mar 11, 2016

AIA survey finds many women and minority architects still feeling underrepresented and unfulfilled

Dissatisfaction with “work-life balance” and compensation are cited as reasons why companies’ diversity strategies may be faltering.

University Buildings | Mar 11, 2016

How architects can help community colleges promote community on campus

Even in the face of funding challenges and historic precedent, there are emerging examples of how partnership between two-year academic institutions and designers can further elevate community on campus. CannonDesign's Carisima Koenig has a few key examples.

Architects | Mar 10, 2016

Value engineering: How to manage the process and limit the risk of VE

AEC consultant Steve Whitehorn shares several ways in which architects can be more effective managers of value-engineered change.

Architects | Mar 9, 2016

Two Houston firms merge to form Method Architecture

In mid-2016, Architects-Plus and Three Square Design Group will join to make a studio that will design industrial centers, corporate interiors, breweries, and more.

Hotel Facilities | Mar 7, 2016

Exclusive villas and spa in China will be built at the center of a lake

The only connection between the complex and the mainland will be a narrow pedestrian bridge.

Office Buildings | Mar 2, 2016

HDR redesigns Twin Cities' studio to have coffee shop vibe

With open spaces, huddle rooms, and a design lab, the firm's new digs are drastically different than the old studio, which felt like working in a law office. Design Principal Mike Rodriguez highlights HDR's renovation plan.

Architects | Feb 25, 2016

12 architects selected for 2016 AIA Young Architects Award

Winners include Amy Kalar and Karen Lu, both with HGA, BNIM's Carey Nagle, and MSR Design's Bob Ganser.

Architects | Feb 24, 2016

Is the booming freelance economy a threat to AEC firms?

By shifting the work (and revenue) to freelancers, “platform capitalism” startups have taken considerable market share from traditional businesses.

Industry Research | Feb 22, 2016

8 of the most interesting trends from Gensler’s Design Forecast 2016

Technology is running wild in Gensler’s 2016 forecast, as things like virtual reality, "smart" buildings and products, and fully connected online and offline worlds are making their presence felt throughout many of the future's top trends.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Warehouses

California bill would limit where distribution centers can be built

A bill that passed the California legislature would limit where distribution centers can be located and impose other rules aimed at reducing air pollution and traffic. Assembly Bill 98 would tighten building standards for new warehouses and ban heavy diesel truck traffic next to sensitive sites including homes, schools, parks and nursing homes.




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