Integrated Design Aids LEED Certification Process





By Jim Nicolow  
OTHER PARTS OF THIS ARTICLEPt. 1: How To Get Your First LEED Certified BuildingPt. 2: Measuring The Cost To Become LEED CertifiedPt. 3: Setting the Right Green Building GoalsPt. 4: LEED 2009 Aims for Speedier Certification ProcessPt. 5: Adding LEED Certification After Project Planning Has BegunPt. 6: This Page


The integrated design process offers opportunities to develop more integrated, cost-effective design solutions than allowed by the more linear conventional design process. For the Grand Bay headquarters, a 20,000-square-foot coastal research station on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, this allowed for better integration of structural and mechanical systems. The project’s mechanical engineer was considering duct distribution below the building’s elevated floor slab, but had insufficient depth to route right-sized ducts within the depth of the floor structure. With a conventional design process, the typical options would have been either to shoehorn a sub-optimal duct profile into the available space, resulting in a less efficient system, or to route the ducts below the structure, resulting in less clearance. Instead, the project’s mechanical engineer was able to discuss his needs with the structural engineer early in the design process, and the structural engineer simply increased the depth of the bar joists to accommodate the preferred duct dimensions. The deeper joists turned out to be more efficient and less costly, too, providing the optimal solution. The integrated design process encourages this beneficial dialogue between disciplines.

Jim Nicolow, AIA, LEED AP, is a principal and the director of sustainable development with architecture firm Lord, Aeck & Sargent.




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  posted on 11/1/2008   Article Use Policy




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