flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Wellness movement is catching on with AEC firms

Standards

Wellness movement is catching on with AEC firms

Hord Caplan Macht the latest firm to join the club by submitting its offices for certification under Fitwel’s program.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | March 29, 2017

The 13,000-sf Denver office for the architectural firm Hord Caplan Macht is going through the process to be certified under the Fitwel health and wellness standards. More firms seem to be embracing wellness for their own offices as well as in their designs for clients. Image: Courtesy HCM

The architectural firm Hord Caplan Macht (HCM) recently completed the documentation to verify that its Denver office can meet the standards necessary to be certified under Fitwel, a certification program to support healthier workplaces created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  The Center for Active Design, Fitwel's oerator and third-party certifier, launched in May 2016 and began rolling out to developers and the AEC community last fall.

Working with experts in public health and design, CDC spent five years developing and testing its Fitwel scorecard. The General Services Administration piloted the program in 89 of its buildings.

HCM, which has also provided verification documents for its offices in Alexandria, Va., and Baltimore, is one of five Fitwel Champions that have committed to certifying more than 50 buildings in aggregate. The other Champions include the CDC, which is also Fitwel’s research and evaluation lead; EYP, Integral Group, and Menkes Development.

Perkins+Will was the first company to adopt Fitwel’s standards for all 11 of the firm’s North American offices, which P+W expects will be certified by 2018.

HCM has been in its 13,000-sf Denver office, a former fire station built in the 1920s, since 2010. The office currently has 72 employees. Ara Massey, that office’s Sustainability Design Manager, tells BD+C that the firm measured its three offices against 63 Fitwel strategies in seven health impact categories to establish health and wellness baselines from which it could work toward certification. The evaluation and documentation took about 40 man-hours, she estimates.

The Center for Active Design promotes Fitwel as more “business friendly” than other certification programs. And Massey confirmed that Fitwel gives companies the flexibility to prioritize which standards to align its operations with “without a lot of cost.”

HCM has already successfully integrated many health-promoting features within its offices, including providing staff with fresh fruit and vegetables and locating in areas with high WalkScores.

 

 

Hord Caplan Macht's Denver office includes meeting spaces with lots of daylight. Image: Courtesy HCM

 

However, one thing that surprised Massey was the emphasis that Fitwel’s scorecard places on “lactation rooms” for new Moms returning to the workforce after giving birth. “That was a real eye opener for us,” says Massey.

The next step toward Fitwel certification is the review process, and Massey expects a lot of give and take between her firm and the Center for Active Design to determine how to meet the criteria levels that HCM is willing to adopt.

Now bitten by the wellness bug, HCM also plans to incorporate Fitwel’s wellness standards into its designs for other clients’ projects “as much as possible,” says Massey. “Particularly active design.”

Arup, Structure Tone embrace wellness

While it’s still too early to say definitively, it appears that the wellness movement is slowly catching on with developers and AEC firms. For example, in late December, Arup opened a 16,333-sf office at 60 State Street in Boston, designed by Dyer Brown Architects, which is targeting the Silver level of the International WELL Building Institute’s WELL Building Standard, as well as the Platinum level of LEED v.4.

Structure Tone’s 82,000-sf corporate headquarters in New York City recently became the first project in that metro to receive Well Building Standard certification. It earned a Silver-level designation by installing more efficient mechanicals and lighting that maintains harmony with employees’ circadian rhythms. The office also offers point-of-access water filters, access to healthy foods, and discounts on bike-share and fitness center memberships. 

Last year, Structure Tone formed a partnership with Delos, the real estate and tech firm that established the WELL Building Standard, in which Structure Tone agreed to accredit 150 employees through the WELL Accredited Professional program.

Related Stories

| May 28, 2014

Rooftop wind turbines becoming green status symbol in New York City

New York City developers are using rooftop wind turbines in an effort to attract buyers by highlighting a building’s green credentials.

| May 28, 2014

Peer review process under way for the WELL Building Standard

The standard is the first protocol of its kind that focuses on improving human wellness within the built environment by identifying specific conditions that, when holistically integrated into building interiors, enhance the health and wellbeing of the occupants.

| May 22, 2014

ASHRAE releases best practice guide for liquid cooling systems in data centers

The publication provides guidelines on interface requirements between chilled-water systems and technology cooling systems and on the requirements of liquid-cooled systems that attach to a datacom electronics rack.

| May 22, 2014

Energy Department analysis shows efficiency gains from ASHRAE 2013 energy standard

Preliminary DOE analysis shows that the ASHRAE/IES’s 2013 energy efficiency standard contains energy savings over the 2010 standard of 8.5% source energy and 7.6% site energy.

| May 15, 2014

AISC Prequalified Seismic Moment Connection standard update now available

The AISC standard Prequalified Moment Connections for Special and Intermediate Steel Moment Frames for Seismic Applications (ANSI/AISC 358-10) has been updated with a second supplement, ANSI/AISC 358s2-14.

| May 15, 2014

ConsensusDocs releases new agreements for contractors who hire consultants

ConsensusDocs has released the new ConsensusDocs 746 Constructor & Geotechnical Consultant Agreement and the 747 Constructor & Consultant Agreement.

| May 13, 2014

19 industry groups team to promote resilient planning and building materials

The industry associations, with more than 700,000 members generating almost $1 trillion in GDP, have issued a joint statement on resilience, pushing design and building solutions for disaster mitigation.

| May 8, 2014

Report: Top storm-resilient cities have high adaptive capacity

The most resilient cities in the world, including five in the U.S., have attributes that would enable them to recover better than others from devastating natural disasters.

| May 8, 2014

LED lighting helps cities receive Energy Star designation

Thanks largely to an ambitious program to boost the use of LED lighting in its buildings, Los Angeles is the top ranked U.S. city on the Environmental Protection Agency’s annual list of U.S. cities that are doing the most to improve energy efficiency.

| May 8, 2014

Infographic: 4 most common causes of construction site fatalities

In honor of Safety Week, Skanska put together this nifty infographic on how to prevent deadly harm in construction. 

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Sustainability

Grimshaw launches free online tool to help accelerate decarbonization of buildings

Minoro, an online platform to help accelerate the decarbonization of buildings, was recently launched by architecture firm Grimshaw, in collaboration with more than 20 supporting organizations including World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), RIBA, Architecture 2030, the World Green Building Council (WorldGBC) and several national Green Building Councils from across the globe.



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