AIA 2030 Commitment Update
Posted
05/18/2012
In 2009 the American Institute of Architects (AIA) introduced
the 2030 Commitment
Program, a voluntary initiative for AIA member firms and other
entities in the built environment that asks these organizations to
make a pledge, develop multi-year action plans, and implement steps
that can advance AIA's goal of carbon neutral buildings by the year
2030. At the end of the 2011 calendar year, firms were asked
to submit an assessment of their 2011 design work using a tool released by the
AIA two years ago.
The key findings from a new report,
Measuring Industry Progress towards 2030, include:
• 104 firms submitted reports - an 86% increase in the
number of reports received in 2010
• 656 million gross square feet (GSF) represented in this
data - a 70% increase from 2010
• 57% of total GSF using energy modeling to predict
operational energy consumption
• 45% of total gross square footage for which actual energy
use will be collected - a 9% increase from 2010
• 34.6% average Predicted Energy Use Intensity reduction
reported by firms
• 21% average firm reduction in Lighting Power Density for
interior projects
• 12.8% of total gross square footage meeting the current 60%
carbon reduction target
The full report also contains participating firm demographics,
energy reduction initiatives undertaken by firms and anecdotal
accounts of the challenges and lessons learned through
participating in the 2030 Commitment Program.