flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New USGBC research explores green building industry’s role in highlighting the importance of buildings as a global solution

Green

New USGBC research explores green building industry’s role in highlighting the importance of buildings as a global solution

First wave of research is part of the Living Standard initiative, which seeks to raise the quality of life for people around the world through research and storytelling.


By USGBC | April 8, 2019

As part of its Living Standard initiative, today, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) released a new U.S. public research report titled Standard Issue that sets out to better gauge how the public feels about issues at the core of the green building community’s mission: sustainability, green buildings and the environment. The report takes a closer look at Americans’ views on environmental issues and how the green building industry can be better positioned as a global solution. As part of the report, USGBC commissioned ClearPath Strategies, a global public opinion research company, to conduct qualitative and quantitative research across five regions of the U.S.

“For more than a quarter century now, the USGBC community has worked to prove that buildings are very much living entities that, if created with forethought and compassion, can mitigate climate-related risks,” said Mahesh Ramanujam, president and CEO, USGBC. “But we need to do more. We know that green buildings are only part of the solution to lengthening and bettering the lives of every person on the planet. That’s why the heart of the green building community’s efforts must go beyond construction or efficiency. Instead, our focus must be on what matters most within our buildings: people. This research questions our conventional wisdom and experience and helps inform our strategy for the future.”

USGBC is working to elevate the role of green buildings beyond the environment and economy and focus on the personal health and well-being benefits they provide. The report found that while three-quarters of respondents said environmental problems are very or somewhat important to them, they do very little to address the problems in their own lives, considering it too daunting a task.

The research also shows that people want to live in a healthy environment, but don’t typically associate green buildings with being part of the solution. When asked which terms most strongly relate to the environment and being green, only 11% said green buildings.

When considering the connection between green buildings and personal health, almost a third (32%) indicated they have direct, personal experience with bad health associated with poor environments or living situations. In addition, when ranking how healthy their local environment is on a scale of 1-10, 65% gave it less than an eight.

The research suggests there is a gap between the enormity of the problem and how people seek to address it in their daily lives, and that the green building community can mobilize and inspire change by connecting messaging to healthy outcomes for human beings.

“When people think about emissions, they think about cars, power plants and industries. They rarely think about buildings, leaving the green building community with a messaging mountain to climb,” continued Ramanujam. “We are not reaching the broader population effectively enough to change their behavior or decisions on the scale necessary to combat climate-related risks.”

Through these research findings, USGBC has identified key areas to talk about how green buildings can help, who they help and why they are necessary:

— Promote Healthy Outcomes: Sustainable cities improve people’s lives and better designed spaces help people live longer, healthier and happier lives. Toxin-free materials, good air ventilation and air-purifying plants, all together in a home or workplace, can improve physical health and comfort by reducing symptoms of allergies and respiratory related illnesses like asthma.

— Future Generations: At the rate the planet is warming, catastrophe is almost certain. If we continue to do nothing, our children will ask, ‘How could you do this to us?’ And they will be right. Our future generations deserve to live in a healthy, thriving environment where they live, learn, work and play. The time to act is now.

— Planetary Stakes: With more natural disasters, drought, fires and hunger, our global environment is getting worse every day. Now United Nations climate scientists report that if we do not make dramatic changes in how we live and the fuel we consume, we will have an environmental catastrophe by 2030.

This is the first of several public research reports that will be released through the Living Standard campaign, which was launched at the 2018 Greenbuild International Conference and Expo in Chicago and is focused on the belief that storytelling can lead to a more sustainable world. The campaign aims to highlight stories – big and small – that capture how USGBC, the LEED green building rating system and other sustainability programs are raising the quality of life for people around the world.

The Living Standard study included both qualitative and quantitative research conducted in the fall of 2018. The study included focus groups with millennials, community opinion formers, young parents, commercial and residential developers, and a survey of the general public at large.

Visit livingstandard.org to learn more, join the campaign and submit stories. USGBC will be releasing additional research reports quarterly in 2019, each with a particular issue and regional focus.

Tags

Related Stories

Green | Feb 6, 2017

A to Z: Seoul’s elevated park features 24,000 alphabetized plants

The plants will represent 250 species found in South Korea.

Green | Feb 3, 2017

Nanjing Green Towers will be Asia’s first vertical forest

The project will be covered in 1,100 trees and 2,500 cascading plants and shrubs.

Sustainability | Jan 27, 2017

An office building proposed for Norway would generate more power than it uses

Over it’s 60-year lifespan, the power generated form the project would cover the energy cost of construction, production, and material transportation.

Sustainability | Jan 24, 2017

From an industrial park to an eco-neighborhood in Brussels, Belgium

At the heart of Vincent Callebaut Architectures’ eco-neighborhood will be three 100-meter-tall Vertical Forests.

Sustainability | Jan 19, 2017

How NYC is slashing 80% of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050

To help one of the most complex cities in the world develop an actionable strategy to meet visionary GHG reduction goals, we focused on strategies for deep carbon reductions for the city’s entire building stock, which constitutes 73% of citywide emissions, writes HDR's Jennifer Bienemann.

Game Changers | Jan 18, 2017

Turning friction into power

Research on piezoelectricity moves closer to practical applications for infrastructure and buildings.

Green | Jan 17, 2017

Everything you need to know to sound brilliant when talking about biophilia

We need nature in our everyday lives – which is why it’s so important to bring nature into the built environment.

Green | Dec 22, 2016

New tool makes it easier to share building energy efficiency information

The tool standardizes data collection from efficiency projects.

Sustainability | Dec 14, 2016

A floating, mobile gym powered by human energy envisioned for the Seine River

Energy created by those exercising within would power the gym down the Seine.

Green | Dec 13, 2016

Illuminated Water Cube highlights Pittsburgh’s new 8th Street Park

The Water Cube is a functioning art installation, dispensing water to the park’s visitors.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Green

Global green building alliance releases guide for $35 trillion investment to achieve net zero, meet global energy transition goals

The international alliance of UK-based Building Research Establishment (BRE), the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA), the Singapore Green Building Council (SGBC), the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and the Alliance HQE-GBC France developed the guide, Financing Transformation: A Guide to Green Building for Green Bonds and Green Loans, to strengthen global cooperation between the finance and real estate sectors.




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