flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

The race to codify resilience design

Resiliency

The race to codify resilience design

An array of guidelines and standards coming from all kinds of sources are jockeying for position to stamp their imprint on resilience best practices and, potentially, new codes.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | October 16, 2017
181 Fremont

Heller Manus Architects

Last November, the International Code Council launched the Alliance for National & Community Resilience for the purpose of developing a whole community benchmark rating system by 2018. The alliance’s members include such heavy hitters as Target and Kaiser Permanente.

Two months earlier, the American Society of Landscape Architects launched an online guide for resilient landscape planning and design to help communities protect themselves from natural disasters. Nancy Somerville, the trade group’s CEO, says ASLA convened a panel of experts—including scientists, policy makers, and landscape architects—to produce policy recommendations that ASLA intends to release sometime next year.

These are examples of an array of guidelines and standards coming from all kinds of sources that are jockeying for position to stamp their imprint on resilience best practices and, potentially, new codes.

“There are an increasing number of standards around resilience that AEC firms need to be prepared for,” says Katharine Burgess, Senior Director of Urban Resilience with the Urban Land Institute. ULI is providing resilience assistance to cities, communities, and its members through a variety of programs.

 

181 FremontThe 56-story 181 Fremont Tower, a LEED Platinum office/apartment tower in San Francisco, is the first to be built on the West Coast to meet an earthquake rating system devised by Arup, the structural engineer on the project. Heller Manus Architects.

 

BREEAM and the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure are working on resiliency standards. The American Society of Civil Engineers is crafting standards for adaptive redesign. The Insurance Institute of Business and Home Safety recently launched a rating system, Fortified Commercial, as a companion to its Fortified Home standard. IBHS has written full sets of standards for construction in markets susceptible to hurricanes, high winds, and hail.

Some AEC firms use their own resilience measurement tools. Arup created a framework and rating system for designing earthquake-resilient buildings which it calls Resilience-based Earthquake Design Initiative, or REDi.

Several cities, states, and the federal government either have their own resilience guidelines or are developing them. Degenkolb Engineers has been helping California create seismic retrofit ordinances for various building typologies.

Erica Fischer, PhD, PE, a former Design Engineer with Degenkolb who is now an Assistant Professor at Oregon State University, says these revisions set timelines for buildings to be evaluated and retrofitted. If the owner doesn’t comply, a notice gets posted on the building stating that it doesn’t meet seismic standards.

In November 2015, the U.S. Green Building Council launched a pilot program for resilient construction, with three LEED credits. USGBC ended the program after a year, but the organization’s Resilience Working Group has been attempting to revamp the credits system. Alex Wilson of the Resilient Design Institute, which spearheaded the pilot, says RDI has resubmitted its proposal. He suggests USGBC might be ready to introduce a new resilience credit program at Greenbuild in Boston this November. USGBC’s spokesperson Marisa Long says the council hasn’t set a timetable for the release.

Tags

Related Stories

Resiliency | Nov 16, 2023

How inclusive design supports resilience and climate preparedness

Gail Napell, AIA, LEED AP BD+C, shares five tips and examples of inclusive design across a variety of building sectors.

Codes and Standards | Nov 10, 2023

Washington state building codes to protect structures from wildfire provoke controversy

New building codes in Washington state intended to protect structures from wildfires are provoking backlash from builders, cities, and environmentalists. Critics charge that the rules that are scheduled to take effect March 15 are confusing, will increase housing costs, and could cause too many trees to be cut down.

Sustainability | Nov 1, 2023

Researchers create building air leakage detection system using a camera in real time

Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a system that uses a camera to detect air leakage from buildings in real time.

Resiliency | Oct 19, 2023

Jacksonville unveils 50-year strategy for resiliency to flooding, extreme heat, wildfires

The City of Jacksonville, Fla., recently released plans for Resilient Jacksonville, a 50-year resiliency strategy to reduce the risks from flooding, hurricanes, excessive heat, and wildfires, and to respond better to those events. The plan includes ways to stop the St. Johns River from flooding vulnerable neighborhoods, including those prone to flooding during heavy rain or hurricanes.

Engineers | Oct 12, 2023

Building science: Considering steel sheet piles for semi-permanent or permanent subsurface water control for below-grade building spaces

For projects that do not include moisture-sensitive below-grade spaces, project teams sometimes rely on sheet piles alone for reduction of subsurface water. Experts from Simpson Gumpertz & Heger explore this sheet pile “water management wall” approach.

Urban Planning | Oct 12, 2023

Top 10 'future-ready' cities

With rising climate dilemmas, breakthroughs in technology, and aging infrastructure, the needs of our cities cannot be solved with a single silver bullet. This Point2 report compared the country's top cities over a variety of metrics.

Building Materials | Oct 2, 2023

Purdue engineers develop intelligent architected materials

Purdue University civil engineers have developed innovative materials that can dissipate energy caused by various physical stresses without sustaining permanent damage.

Resiliency | Sep 25, 2023

National Institute of Building Sciences, Fannie Mae release roadmap for resilience

The National Institute of Building Sciences and Fannie Mae have released the Resilience Incentivization Roadmap 2.0. The document is intended to guide mitigation investment to prepare for and respond to natural disasters.

Codes and Standards | Sep 25, 2023

Modern codes, construction techniques saved structures in Maui wildfire

Modern building codes and construction techniques were effective in saving buildings from the devastating wildfire in Maui on August 9th, according to a recent report, IBHS Early Insights Lahaina Fire—2023, from the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety’s research division.

Mass Timber | Sep 19, 2023

Five Things Construction Specialties Learned from Shaking a 10-Story Building

Construction Specialties (CS) is the only manufacturer in the market that can claim its modular stair system can withstand 100 earthquakes. Thanks to extensive practical testing conducted this spring at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) on the tallest building ever to be seismically tested, CS has identified five significant insights that will impact all future research and development in stair solutions.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Codes and Standards

New FEMA rules include climate change impacts

FEMA’s new rules governing rebuilding after disasters will take into account the impacts of climate change on future flood risk. For decades, the agency has followed a 100-year floodplain standard—an area that has a 1% chance of flooding in a given year.



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