4. 1990 2000
Key role in
the creation &
development of the
USGBC and LEED
Founded
the AIA
Committee
on the
Environment
1995
Birth of the Living Building
concept through Plus Ultra,
a report about the Montana
State University’s
NIST-funded project
BNIM develops the
Sustainability Report & Matrix
to explain the financial costs
of sustainable design for
the David & Lucile Packard
Foundation in Los Altos, CA
BNIM designs the first
building to achieve Living
Building Challenge —
the Omega Center for
Sustainable Living in
Rhinebeck, NY
Community
Transformation
Greensburg
becomes the First
City in the U.S.
to adopt LEED
Platinum Standard
2005 2010
BNIM along with
USGBC develops
REGEN, a tool that
goes beyond LEED
to help designers
work regeneratively
BNIM works to
foster and bring
prosperity to urban
communities
PAST DEFINING OUR FUTURE
5.
6. AIA COTE Top 10 Projects
*COTE TOP TEN + COTE PLUS
*SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT *SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT *SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT
13. 1993 Valmeyer, Illinois Flood Relocation
1993 Pattonsburg, Missouri Flood Relocation
1993 Great Mississippi River Flood
2001 Tropical Storm Allison In Houston
2005 Hurricane Katrina In New Orleans
2007 EF5 Tornado In Greensburg
2008 Iowa River Flood In Iowa City
2010 Cumberland River Flood In Nashville
2010 Earthquake In Haiti
2011 Floods In Fargo
2011 Tornado In Tuscaloosa
2011 Tornado In Joplin
2011 Tornado in Springfield MA
Transforming Natural Disasters
by Building Healthy Communities
Rebuilding Community
AFTER
BEFORE
14. There is no power greater
than a community discovering
what it cares about.
Margaret J Wheatley
15. “Greensburg is a global example
of how clean energy can power
an entire community, how it can
bring jobs and businesses to a
place where piles of bricks and
rubble once lay.”
President Barack Obama
FIRST PLATINUM COMMUNITYEF5 TORNADO
29. Title of the Slide
Nem. Itatiatus et es sae vellaut repudaepeles evellup tinciun debitatio ese se
in consed expercidis enimpore venimin velicitatio. Elistis que rest lab invelis
One BNIMPEOPLE + PROJECT IMPACT
30. Title of the Slide
NUMBER OF UNIQUE CITIES
795
NUMBER OF PROJECTS
2,108
44. HUMAN PURPOSED INTEGRATED DESIGN
Economic + Environmental + Social
Human Purposed
A deep commitment to humanity as the origin
of inspiration, innovation and prosperity.
Integrated Design
OneBNIM approach to inclusion,
sustainability, passion for design, and humanity
What is it?
HP.id
45. We stress the human component
of our approach because in a world
of algorithmic music selection and
suggestive online selling, humans
have insights, instincts and vitality
that can’t be underestimated.
Why
Why HP.id?
46. Beauty/Inspiration
Design Awards, Influence, Replication/Innovation
Comfort/Wellness
Daylight, Temperature, Ventilation
Connectivity/Collaboration
Types of spaces, Configuration/Concept,
Engagement, Partnerships
Achievement/Performance
Productivity, Efficiency, Absenteeism
Agility/Resilience
Retention, Satisfaction
How does HP.id work?
How
48. LEED + Living
FIRST BUILDING TO RECEIVE BOTH LEED
PLATINUM + LIVING BUILDING CHALLENGE
CERTIFICATIONS IN THE WORLD
OMEGA CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVING
RHINEBECK, NY
49. OMEGA CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVING
RHINEBECK, NY
Net Zero
ENERGY + WATER
PLATINUM
LIVING BUILDING
CHALLENGE
59. Building Positive will meet the most stringent sustainable
building standards on the planet at three scales
+
+
+
PEOPLE
Sustainability at Three Scales
BUILDINGCOMMUNITY
62. • Expanding research to a larger urban scale
• Evaluate environmental quality + human health/
wellbeing quality at a high level of detail
• Partner with the City on the City Energy
Project, as well as the Smart + Connected
City Living Lab
• Advance science of city building
THE CREATION OF A KC SUSTAINABLE DISTRICT
Eco District
65. DIAGRAMS
1. Concrete Frame
2. Connection to the street
3. Living Building Challenge
4. Interior connection to
north park
5. Main gathering space
connection to north park.
6. Natural Daylight
optimization
The Beginning
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
68. Floor Plan
LEVEL 3
To the west is all conferencing and special
pin-up and critique areas for large project
team gatherings. Holes in the floor allow
natural daylight down 2 levels and socially
connect the studio. Collaboration boxes
sit out in the studio as objects. The interior
section of the studio is a collaborative
gathering space and resource center.
1 STUDIO
2 CONFERENCE
3 TOILET
4 CRIT/PIN UP
5 INTERIORS LIBRARY
6 STORAGE8
16
0
32
69.
70. The Path to Net Zero
KANSAS CITY
BENCHMARKING
BUILDING
ASHARE 90.1-2010
BUILDING
GOAL EUI ROOFTOP PV
ANNUALENERGYUSEINTENSITY,KBTUFSF
Net Zero Energy80 48 22
SAFTEY FACTOR
24
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
73. COLLABORATION WITH SATCHIN PANDA
PHD, SALK INSTITUTE
Effects of Daylight
Deep sleep
Body
temperature rises
Melatonin
drops
Corticosteroids rise
High alertness
Athletic performance
peaks
Body cools
down
Melatonin rises
76. t lab invelis expliquidita et es
62 Daylight Modeling
77. 61 Right to Light
NATURAL DAYLIGHT
SECTION PERSPECTIVE
• Winter solstice low light angle and
potential heat gain.
• Summer solstice high light angle and
desire to block heat gain.
• South Sunshade
• Full coverage elevated roof mounted PV
and PV thermal.
• Central Skylight lets daylight to the
internal areas of the building with a
square floor plan.
78. Long Life – Loose Fit.
The studio is about
designing a space that can
grow and transform as we
do. Studio is about variety
and flexibility in the way we
work. Throughout the space
are different postures based
on work modes. Work cubes
are interjected into the center
of studio, integrating more
pin-up, writeable surfaces,
media, fabrication, project
meeting and focus spaces.
Studio
LEVEL 2 - LONG LIFE, LOOSE FIT
79. NATURAL VENTILATION
• Prevailing winds out of the North and South
• Low operable windows on N,S, and E
• Operable skylight releases heated air.
• A radiant slab acts as a thermal fly wheel that
radiates heat and cooling.
• A red-light green light system alerts building tenants
when to open windows.
Air Quality
82. 72%REDUCTION
NET ZERO AND NET POSITIVE ENERGY
19,000GALLONS OF INFILTRATION
WITH 36,606 GALLONS OF RUNOFF
66,415GALLONS FOR BUILDING USE
EQUIVALENT TO 5 MONTHS OF WATER USE
BUILDING POSITIVE
KANSAS CITY, MO
86. Guiding Principles
Beauty
• Create an INSPIRING and BEAUTIFUL campus
Nature
• Enhance connection to NATURE
• Create spatial patterns that are ORGANIC and inspired by nature
• Increase quantity and quality of OPEN SPACES, including increased daylight
• Improve CONNECTION to surrounding Qualcomm buildings
People
• Enhance direct and in-direct COMMUNICATION
• Provide effective COLLABORATION spaces
• Provide amenities to support a good WORK/LIFE BALANCE
• Foster a COMMUNITY that supports a HEALTHY lifestyle
• Design a campus that makes Qualcomm employees HAPPY
• Create a FLEXIBLE work environment
Delivery
• Be EFFICIENT
• Be on TIME
• Be on BUDGET
87. Design Strategies
High-Performance Human-Purposed Workplace
Spectrum of Places to Work
The interior design became an opportunity to use
color story and the mood and emotion evoked by
the spectrum to designate places of focus,
collaboration and social interaction.