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Wellness gains ground with real estate and property management professionals

Green

Wellness gains ground with real estate and property management professionals

Structure Tone survey finds LEED is still a selling point, but interest in resilience practices could be waning.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | September 27, 2017

Water Street Tampa, a mixed-used district under construction in Florida, is striving to be the world's first community certified under the WELL Building Institute's Community Standard. Indoor air quality and comfort tied for first among the most important wellness attributes cited by real estate and property management execs polled in a new survey about sustainability. Image: Strategic Property Partners 

After a summer of tumultuous and severe weather events that wreaked havoc on the Caribbean and the Southern United States, a certain segment of real estate and property managers still doesnā€™t see the value of incorporating resilience into their buildings or their operations.

Thatā€™s one of the key findings in Structure Toneā€™s second-annual Client Sustainability Report. The construction management firm polled a select group of 140 senior corporate real estate and facilities management professionals to gauge where sustainability comes into play for end users across the commercial real estate community.

Based on their responses, it would appear that ā€œgreen buildingā€ is now mainstream. None of the respondents consider it a fad. More than three-fifthsā€”62%ā€”see LEED certification as a market differentiator, up nine percentage points from last yearā€™s survey. And more than half of those polled agree that employees expect the buildings they work in to be LEED-certified.

Indeed, 45% of those polled said they would pay more to lease space in a green building. And 42% expressed concern about where their buildings rank in public energy disclosers.

ā€œLast year there was a concern that when LEEDv4, a more stringent version of LEED, was implemented, many owners would simply stop pursuing certification. But our results show thatā€™s simply not the case,ā€ says Jennifer Taranto, LEED AP ID+C/BD+C, WELL AP, Structure Toneā€™s director of Sustainability.

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Sustainability is becoming mainstream, and LEED certification is still the gold standard in commercial real estate, according to Structure Tone's survey. Image: Structure Tone.

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That being said, the No. 1 barrier to building green remains its cost for an overwhelming number of those polled.Ā  And there are still limits to how green the real estate and property management communities want to take their buildings. Only 11% of the survey respondents said their companies have policies that support progress toward Net-Zero Energy in the building sector. This is a slight downward movement from the previous year of 15%. ā€œSurprisingly, 31% of respondents did not know if they have real estate in cities that have community-wide Net Zero goals,ā€ Structure Tone reports.

Cost might also explain why the number of respondents who think resilience is important fell to 54%, from 61% last year. And 17% fewer respondents said they are seeking resilience expertise on their projects. (The survey was open to responsesĀ from March 1 through June 19, justĀ months before Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria did their damage, and an 8.1-magnitude earthquake rocked Mexico City.)

Taranto tells BD+C that she was ā€œsurprisedā€ by the lower responses about resilience. However, she also notes that the survey is in line with attitudes Structure Tone continues to encounterĀ in the field from some clients that have yet to give resilience closer scrutiny.

Conversely, more real estate and property management professionals are embracing wellness as a standard for their buildings to pursue. More than 80% of those polled cited wellness as a relevant factor in recruiting and retaining employees. More than half of the respondents said they planned to seek expertise to devise wellness strategies for their buildings.

ā€œWellness is certainly coming to the forefront,ā€ says Taranto.Ā 

Leading this charge is the International WELL Building Institute, which has developed wellness standards for buildings and communities. Water Street TampaĀ­ā€”a $3 billion mixed-use district under construction in Florida that BD+C reports on in a feature article about resilience in our October 2017 issueā€”on September 5 launched a pilot of the WELL Community Standard. This project, which when completed will have more than 9 million sf of commercial and residential space, is targeting to be the worldā€™s first WELL-certified community.

One-quarter of respondents to Structure Toneā€™s survey said they were looking to do a WELL project within the next year.

In Structure Toneā€™s survey, 70% of the respondents work at companies with more than 1,000 employees. Two-thirds of those polled have square footage responsibilities that exceed 1 million sf. The top sector responses came from commercial office, data centers, healthcare, and pharma/life sciences.Ā 

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