The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors has partnered with health & wellbeing consultancy Ekkist to launch a new guide to designing, delivering and managing healthier buildings.
RICS points to a wealth of research that shows how health is affected by a range of factors in the built environment, including noise, lighting, temperature, poor air quality and ease of doing physical activity. With people spending as much as 90% of their time indoors, designing for health can have significant benefits.
RICS’ new guide builds on its international building operation standards, which go beyond traditional measures of a building’s performance to include the experience of the people who use it. As part of this, the publication provides more advice on supporting people’s health and wellbeing.
The information covers all stages of a project, from the initial definition through to running the completed building. It sets out various ways in which planning and construction professionals can include features that promote health and wellbeing, or mitigate factors that damage health. This ranges from improving air quality to tackling loneliness.
Alongside the guide, RICS has also announced a new strategic collaboration with The International WELL Building Institute, whose WELL Building Standard is an established roadmap for creating and certifying spaces that advance health and wellbeing, already used by more than 44,000 projects internationally. The organisations will work together to encourage built environment professionals to adopt strategies that advance health and wellbeing in buildings and organisations worldwide. They will place particular focus on integrating health and wellbeing into the valuation of properties, working to advance benchmarking, regulatory frameworks and standards, with an emphasis on the built environment sector in Europe.
Olga Turner Baker, managing director of Ekkist, said: “Health and wellbeing has entered the forefront of forward-thinking companies’ agendas. Organisations have realised that designing for health is pivotal to their success. As a result, the adoption of global standards has grown.
“Certifications provide a common language that is credible and clear, they help mitigate risk and future-proof buildings against occupier trends, support organisations with frameworks for transparency and accountability, and provide results. They create healthier and happier people and places and add tangible social and economic value.”
Printed Copy:
Would you also like to receive CIR Magazine in print?
Data Use:
We will also send you our free daily email newsletters and other relevant communications, which you can opt out of at any time. Thank you.
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE