The Mandate for Green/Sustainable Design: Good for People-Good for the Planet Earth

Dr. Louise Jones, Ph.D., Director of Interior Design Graduate Program, Eastern Michigan University, USA

Dr. Dorothy L. Fowles, Ph.D., Iowa State University, Dept. of Art & Design, USA

Dr. Elizabeth A. King, Dean, College of Allied Health Services, University of Cincinnati, USA


The Problem

The 15% of the world's population living in high-income countries (i.e., minority countries) consume 56% of the world's total consumption, while the 40% who have the lowest-income (i.e., majority counties) consume only 11%. But it is more than the equitable use of resources. It would take 2.6 additional planets for everyone in the world to live like the average person in high-income countries. Current consumption and production patterns are projected to be25% higher than the earth's ecological capacity (United Nations, 2002). Humanity is eroding the planet's natural capital at an unsustainable rate. Buildings have a major influence on many of the environmental problems facing the global society. According to the World Watch Institute, about 10% of the global economy involves the construction, furnishing, and operation of buildings, thereby using as much as 50% of the world's natural resources and causing extensive environmental damage (US Department of Energy, 2003).

Conventional design/construction methods have been linked to environmental damage, including depletion of natural resources, air and water pollution, toxic wastes, and global warming. In the USA, buildings consume 65 % of the annual electricity consumption, 25% of the timber harvest, and 42% of the potable water. Buildings produce 30% of the annual greenhouse gas emissions and building materials account for 40% of landfill waste (Guidry, 2004; Petrakis, 2003).

Indoor air quality (IAQ) is a major concern because it can impact people's health, comfort, well being, and productivity. Research indicates that people spend approximately 90 percent of their time indoors (EPA, 1997). A growing body of scientific evidence indicates that the air within homes and other buildings can be more seriously polluted than the outdoor air (EPA, 1995). People who may be exposed to indoor air pollutants for the longest periods of time are often those most susceptible to the effects of indoor air pollution. Such groups include, but are not limited to, children, elders, and people who are chronically ill, especially those suffering from cardiovascular disease, respiratory diseases (including allergies and asthma), or multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS).

The Solution

The United Nation's World Commission on Environment and Development (The Brundtland Commission, 1987) defined sustainability as "meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs." Often the terms "sustainable design" and "green design" are used interchangeably. However, there is an important difference. Green design focuses on people's issues, their health, safety, and welfare, whereas sustainable design encompasses a more global approach, the health, safety, and welfare of the planet (Green Design Education Initiative, 2003). The term, environmentally responsible design, is often used to encompass both concepts. Those responsible for the interiors of the built environment can successfully implement environmentally responsible design in both new and existing buildings.

The Connections

Environmentally responsible design addresses the interrelationships of design, human behavior, and environmental responsibility. Many building interiors subject people to poor indoor air quality that negatively affects their health, safety, welfare, and performance. Universal design considers the needs of all people, regardless of their age, ability, or physical stature. Environmentally responsible design is, therefore, an integral part of universal design. Designers, who practice environmentally responsible design, plan, specify, and execute interior environments that reflect their concern for the users' quality of life and the world's ecology.

The Process

A life cycle approach requires the analysis of furnishings and finishes from the specification of raw materials to the end of useful life. Designers must identify and analyze the raw materials, manufacturing methods, transportation, installation, use, maintenance, and disposal of all the furnishings and finishes specified for an interior space. Reduce, reuse, and recycle are guiding principles. When disposal at end of useful life becomes reuse, manufacturing has become a closed loop process, the ultimate goal for products and materials (McDonough & Braungart, 2002).

The Goal

This Intensive will explore the mandate that those who are responsible for building interiors must practice environmentally responsible design.

The Learning Objectives

At the end of the intensive participants will be able to:

  • Explain green, sustainable, and environmentally responsible design.
  • Connect environmentally responsible design and universal design.
  • Describe the issues supporting the need for environmentally responsible design.
  • Develop criteria for specification of green/sustainable finishes and furnishings
  • Identify and evaluate green/sustainable finishes and furnishings currently on the market.
  • Implement environmentally responsible design.

The Schedule

30 min - Why is environmentally responsible design a mandate?

30 min - What is green or sustainable or environmentally responsible design?

30 min - What makes a product green/sustainable?

15 min - Break

45 min - Which furnishings and finishes, currently in the marketplace, are green/sustainable?

45 min - Are there models to lead the way?
Case Study: An Exemplar for Academic Buildings in the 21st Century

45 min How do we get there from here?
Discussion of the next steps for each participant and the design community

(4 hours Total)

The References

Brundtland Commission, United Nation's World Commission on Environment and Development. (1987). Our common future. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.

EPA Office of Radiation and Indoor Air. (1995). The inside story: A guide to indoor air quality" #402-K-93-007. Retrieved March 13, 2004, from http://www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/insidest.html#Intro1

EPA Office of Air and Radiation. (1997). An office building occupant's guide to indoor air quality. #402-K-97-003. Retrieved March 13, 2004, from www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/occupgd.html

Gack, J., & Greene, J. (2003). A guide to cost-effective green design for public building owners. Environmental Design & Construction, 6(6), p 62-64. Retrieved March 11, 2004, from ProQuest.

Green Design Education Initiative. (n.d.) Green/Sustainable interiors. Retrieved March 1, 2004, from http://www.idec.org/greendesign/home.html

Guidry, K. (2004). How green is your building? An appraiser's guide to sustainable design. The Appraisal Journal. 72(1), 57-69. Retrieved March 10, 2004, from Proquest.

McDonough, W.; & Braungart, M. (2003). Sustainable building and construction: Towards a sustaining architecture for the 21st century: The promise of cradle-to-cradle design. Industry and Environment. 26(2), p 13-16. Retrieved March 10, 2004, from ProQuest.

Petrakis , A. (2003). Developers and architects see the light. National Real Estate Investor, 45, (7), p NA. Retrieved March 11, 2004 from General Reference Center Gold.

United Nations. (2002). Consumption and production patterns. World Summit on Sustainable Development, Johannesburg, South Africa. Retrieved March 3, 2004, from ProQuest.

United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs: Division for Sustainable Development. (2003). Sustainable production and consumption fact sheet. Retrieved, March 1, 2004, from http://www.un.org/esa/sustdev/sdissues/consumption/marrakech.htm

US Department of Energy. (2003). From Roodman, D.M., & Lenssen, N. (1995). A building revolution: How ecology and health concerns are transforming construction. Worldwatch Paper #124. Retrieved March 13, 2004, from www.WorldWatch.org.

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