AIA Announces Results of First Year of Projected Energy Use Data from Firms Participating in 2030 Commitment Program

by Jonathan McGaha | May 15, 2011 12:00 am

In 2009 the American Institute of Architects introduced the 2030 Commitment Program[1], 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 2010 calendar year, firms were asked to submit an assessment of their 2010 design work using a tool[2] released by the AIA last year.

“The findings are a good first step to see where we are as an industry in reaching the ultimate goal of achieving carbon neutrality in buildings by 2030. It is encouraging to see the number of participating firms in this program and the large amount of real estate that their projects account for,” said AIA EVP/Chief Executive Officer, Robert Ivy, FAIA. “That said it is also a wake-up call for the profession that we need to be more steadfast in the prediction of energy usage in design projects, as well as collecting actual post-occupancy performance data.”

A new report[3], “Measuring Industry Progress towards AIA 2030 Carbon Reduction Goal,” includes data from 56 firms accounting for nearly 385 million gross square feet (GSF) nationwide. The key findings include:

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.

Endnotes:
  1. 2030 Commitment Program: http://www.aia.org/press/AIAB079729
  2. tool: http://www.aia.org/press/AIAB083333
  3. report: http://www.aia.org/aiaucmp/groups/aia/documents/pdf/aiab089350.pdf

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