| DEFINITIONS
WHAT
IS SUSTAINABLE DESIGN?
If
one brushes aside the jargonóall the green, sustainable, eco adjectivesóone
is left with the simple admonition to design "well": to design
in full recognition of the complexity of the design problem.
The
first key to sustainable design is accepting a significant change in the
design process itself. Inter-disciplinary collaboration, and "lateral,"
as opposed to "linear" thinking, are the new tools.
Sustainable
design originates with a holistic approach, incorporating economic, cultural,
social, ecological and technical
concerns. To design sustainably is to design with the long term in mind,
to minimize a building's impact on the natural environment, while maximizing
its social and cultural relevance. Social and cultural relevance are commonly
addressed by current design practice and have undoubtedly been at the
forefront of your own design studio explorations over the last few years.
However the notion of minimizing architecture's impact on the environment,
or "treading lightly on the earth" so as to sustain the environment
for future generations, is less familiar to us all.
Ecological
design is actually a sub-set of sustainable design, but it is the part
that gives this new methodology its colour and technical challenge. Ecological
design embraces materials, techniques and systems that are largely unfamiliar
to conventional architectural practice, from solar panels, hybrid ventilation
systems and passive solar heating to straw bale and milk paint.
We
no longer have the option to design unsustainably.
Putting
aside questions of conscience for a moment, sustainable design expertise
is rapidly becoming a business necessity. Five years ago only fringe practices
claimed a "green" expertise: today large conventional, and hot
avant-garde architectural firms alike are shifting uncomfortably into
this unknown field under pressure from clients.
WHAT
IS THE ROLE OF THE ARCHITECT?
As
the instigator of built form, you are the mediator and translator of the
web of relationships that connect people to each other and to the world
around them. You are responsible for the physical filter between inside
and outside, self and other, nature and culture...with all its eventual
repercussions. This perspective invites profound reflection on our roles
as stewards of the physical environment and facilitators of the physical
and psychological well being of our buildings' users.
WHAT
IS ARCHITECTURE?
Architecture
is neither static nor benign. Architecture is a larger-than-life projection
of our presence on the world that continues to exist after we have abandoned
it, to be used and misused, valued and wasted. Our design decisions have
a profound impact, not only in the immediate environment of our constructions,
but also on a much vaster scale, from the sites of material production
to the landfills of our neglect.
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