Category Archives: Sustainability

Melissa Vernon

Gearing up for the Green Apple Day of Service

The year is flying by and the 2013 Green Apple Day of Service will be here before we know it.

While our project plans and communications calendars are being developed, two recent events have gotten us in the spirit of service.

During our Americas sales meeting in February in San Antonio, TX, two schools hosted Interface volunteers. The children at Bowden Elementary School jumped for joy (literally) when they saw the new area rugs in their classroom. We thought we were the only ones that got that excited about carpet! The younger kids sit on the floor for story time, so transforming their classroom from a hard, unfriendly space into a warm and visually stimulating environment felt very rewarding.

In March, Interface hosted an

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Education Summit with 16 customers from school districts, interior design, and universities. During the two and a half day Summit, as an alternative to the typical ‘recreation’ part of the agenda, the group headed to the Good Shepherd Therapeutic Center in Warm Springs, Georgia. Good Shepherd provides residential care to troubled adolescent boys through a unique farm-based treatment program. The hard floors in their seven bedrooms were uninviting and cold. Following an introduction from our Field Services team, stacks of carpet were waiting for the volunteers at each bedroom. A design competition broke out! Serious negotiations ensued, carpet was swapped, and the solid red tiles emerged as a hot commodity. Our customers learned the techniques of carpet installation, and also felt very honored to have this opportunity to give back.

Over the years, we’ve learned that volunteering not only helps those on the receiving end, but the volunteers benefit as well. Researchers have discovered that the act of helping others decreases stress. It also contributes to positive well-being reminding us that we are an important part of the world.

Get Involved: Find out how your organization can give back during the Green Apple Day of Service.

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Interface Hosts Pro Bono Leaders Summit

Change can occur by force or by need, but to have the greatest probability of impact, change must happen through leadership. On September 12-14, 2012, the first-ever Pro Bono Leaders Summit convened the vanguard of architecture and design firms creating industry change in an effort to ask the important questions and begin to create the answers.

Public Architecture and Interface, assembled a core group of pro bono leaders in architecture and design, law, and corporate philanthropy to begin a conversation focused on advancing the design profession’s intelligence and effectiveness in the social impact area. The Summit was represented by a diverse cross-section of the largest, most influential firms and emergent small offices. These included: ASID, Bernheimer Architecture, LLC, Cannon Design, Eskew+Dumez+Ripple, Gensler, HKS, Inc., HOK, Interboro Partners, Interface Studio Architects, McCall Design Group, MP Studios, Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, Perkins + Will, The Miller Hull Partnership, LLC, True Impact, Vincent James & Associates, Works Partnership Architecture, and WRNS Studio.

State of the movement
Interface laid the foundation for action by sharing their strengths-based, entrepreneurial culture that promotes positive change and the realization of new ideas and goals within their organization.

The Summit then kicked off with attending firms sharing their current pro bono practices in a round table discussion. The dialogue centered on each firm’s approach, including the current opportunities and challenges of integrating this work into staffing, project management and service delivery, R&D, marketing, and other related activities.

Attendees were asked to make note of the following: What makes these projects different? What can be achieved? What presents a challenge? What is the impact on the organization being served? What is the impact on the design firm providing the service? Hundreds of salient points were documented, and categories began to emerge from these observations that would later become the ideas that inspire action, and eventually lead to impactful change.

What can we learn from law?
William Alderman, a Partner at the law firm Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, turned the dialogue to the legal profession, a group that has long promoted pro bono service as a critically valuable aspect of professional practice.

For lawyers, the watershed moment occurred in 1993 when the American Bar Association adopted Model Rule 6.1: Every lawyer has a professional responsibility to provide legal services to those unable to pay. A lawyer should aspire to render at least 50 hours of pro bono public legal services per year.

What does this mean for the design professions? What if we had a working definition for the various approaches to pro bono work that was adopted by the professional associations, AIA, ASID, IIDA, ASLA and the rest?

Unlike the various approaches to pro bono that are currently practiced by the design professions, the legal profession strictly defines pro bono as no fee. Reduced fee is good and has a purpose, but it’s not pro bono. Moreover, law schools are the best promoters of pro bono culture. They are the training grounds, as no law student comes out of school without some experience doing pro bono work. What if pro bono service was better integrated into design school curricula?

When asked if there has been a drop in pro bono service since the economic downturn, Alderman says, “not substantially.” It’s competitive for law firms to do pro bono work. In part, this is due to The American Lawyer tracking firms’ pro bono hours and the magazine’s promotion of firms doing more than 20 percent annually. “Their clients see these reports and want to be associated with supporting socially-responsible work.” What if Public Architecture, DesignIntelligence, Architect magazine, or another respected voice were to report the leading pro bono contributors or the impact of firms’ pro bono work on underserved communities?

Doing well by doing good
Most people remember the early 1990’s when environmental sustainability needed to be sold as a valuable component of practice; now it’s something every firm aspires to deliver. At the Summit, the consensus was in support of a triple bottom line approach. Social sustainability, as well as environmental and economic sustainability, should be part of every business. Interface took it a step further by suggesting that the principles of biomimicry can inspire change in the design industry. What if we looked at the genius of nature and natural systems to discover new paradigms and models of change?

There is also growing evidence that successful future business

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practices must balance profit with the public good, so how can designers make it an integral part of their business model? Farron Levy was introduced to address this question. Levy is the founder and president of True Impact, a consulting firm that helps organizations maximize and measure the social and business value of their operating practices. He argues that while pro bono work can have a significant social impact, there is more that firms should expect from these projects. Pro bono work must also drive firm goals.

The case for change
Reporting on social impact can be tricky. Time, money, and materials are easy to tally and can make for a good story. But that story is not inclusive of the full value. If the outputs are the goods and services provided, then a proxy for knowing if your time is well-leveraged would be to provide higher-skilled services that result in a bigger impact. More than exercising a personal interest or using a skill you’re already good at, pro bono work can be a way to develop new skills that can be repurposed on future fee-earning projects.

Outcomes are another obvious opportunity to show value and can provide the ideal metric for longer-term pro bono projects. Levy asks, “As a result of a pro bono service investment, how did the project change the targeted social condition and did it have a ripple effect on society?” The equation can be simplified to convert social impact into market value: divide the investment by the number of people impacted. The result can be made into an effectively humanized narrative.

Levy concluded that it’s important to introduce business goals for pro bono investments early in the planning stage. True Impact reports that when pro bono work is integrated into a business structure, it can support a broader set of business goals including recruiting top-level talent, business development, and risk mitigation. What if we had better tools to measure impact?

The Pro Bono Leaders Summit brought up many valuable “what if…” questions, far more than can be shared in this article. And while it is impossible to solve these challenges over the course of two days, there was an intense collaboration between the firms in attendance. Together, we prioritized the challenges and the “what ifs” and asked, “What would it take to make this happen?”

The Summit was a first and significant step to make powerful social change in the architecture and design professions. Every attendee left with some skin in the game and made a commitment to continue to work sale viagra together to translate the questions into impactful actions, to support the broader A+D community in showing the value of pro bono design to improve lives as well as the benefits to business. Watch for more exciting reporting to come as the teamwork progresses.

Interface is proud to support Public Architecture and The 1% Program in its mission to promote design for social impact.

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Melissa Vernon

Leaving a green legacy for schools

Leadership. Respect. Care for our future leaders. Leaving a legacy.
These shared core values make an alliance between Interface and the U.S. Green Building Council’s Green Apple Day of Service a natural fit. So it will come as no surprise that Interface has signed on as one of the first corporate sponsors of the new Center for Green Schools at the USGBC. In this role, we are excited to be partners in launching the inaugural Green Apple Day of Service and we’ve spent the last months preparing for this day.

Interface has a long history of community involvement and since 2005, has devoted a half-day during our annual sales meeting to volunteer in local communities throughout the Americas. Through these experiences, our employees see the lasting impact we can leave in just a few hours of work. We experience the increased camaraderie by working side-by-side in service and sharing in that feeling of giving. We take pride in working for a company that prioritizes community involvement. These “legacy projects” have become part of our culture and an expression of who we are. We are eager to extend our service efforts, creating more volunteer projects across a greater geographic area for the Green Apple Day of Service.

On September 29th (and many other days throughout the fall), thousands of volunteers will come together in support of healthy, sustainable schools, including k-12, colleges and universities.

From carpet installations at educational facilities in New York City, Philadelphia, Chicago, Charlotte, Austin TX and LaGrange GA, to school yard improvements at two schools in Georgia, Interface volunteers will be leaving their mark by improving the indoor and outdoor environments at schools across the United States. A creative reuse center in Boston that supports area educators will benefit from donations of recycled materials from carpet manufacturing. Further south, our Latin American colleagues are hosting projects in São Paulo

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and Curitiba, Brazil, installing carpet, planting flowers and trees and sharing the exciting ideas of biophilic design as we demonstrate the benefits of integrating nature into the school.Interface is proud to be partnering with the USGBC and helping to extend their reach and create projects across the United States as well as around the world.

Participating in the Green Apple Day of Service has been a meaningful activity that has created new and deeper relationships with schools, clients, and local USGBC Chapters. We are excited for the future, building off of this

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inaugural year to continue to create healthier, safer, more planet-friendly environments that inspire better learning for our children and communities.

Learn how you can participate in the Green Apple Day of Service

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Melissa Vernon

Changemakers: Meredith Elbaum

As we work along our sustainability journey, we have the pleasure of meeting many individuals and firms that are leading great change. We have enjoyed our relationship with them and want to share their stories with you. This series will feature individuals leading the sustainability movement within the architecture and design community. This next generation of leaders found their passion for sustainability early in their careers and have based their profession on advocating and leading for a more sustainable future.

Meredith Elbaum, Director of Sustainable Design, Sasaki Associates

For the past nine years I’ve been working at Sasaki Associates, an international planning and design firm, based in Watertown, Massachusetts. Like Nellie Reid, my role is always evolving. When I first arrived at Sasaki, I was charged with “tipping the see-saw towards sustainability.” In 2006, after becoming a registered architect, I was appointed Director of Sustainable Design. My role has always been to accelerate the level of sustainability in Sasaki’s work. What changes, is how to do it. In that quest, we felt strongly that we needed to lead by example. I spent much effort initially greening our internal operations, including earning LEED for Existing Buildings Gold certification for our Watertown office. We reduced our electricity bills so drastically that the utility company knocked on our door to see if our meters were broken. We also felt it was important to build a sustainability-literate staff. We organized annual internal mini-conferences called GreenDAY to celebrate sustainability and exchange knowledge. Interface’s Ray Anderson and Lindsay James both participated in Sasaki’s GreenDAYs. Most importantly are the projects we plan, design and build. I’ve spent a lot of time supporting project teams, assisting in integrating sustainability at all scales.

Q: Tell us about a specific project where you felt you really made a difference or did something innovative in sustainability.

Since 2010, I’ve been working with the University of Missouri in Columbia (MU) on first developing and then updating their Climate Action Plan. The plan presents clear goals for a sustainable future across multiple fronts and depicts these concisely. An outcome of the initial plan was developing Sustainable Building Design and Construction Standards for the University which included a campus wide approach to LEED. This work is helping MU reach their sustainability goals faster in a cost-effective manner. Instead of approaching sustainability one building at a time they are looking at their entire campus. We’re moving them beyond the metric of “how many LEED buildings does your campus have” to “how truly sustainable is your campus.”

Q: How are you making change happen?

I believe change happens at different levels and is more effective as a “carrot” rather than a stick. Many problems related to the environment, society, and

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economics can be significantly improved through regulation. However, I believe change is personal. We need to show people how they can benefit by living more sustainably. We need to understand people’s motivations, fears, and desires and work with them. Like a tree plants seeds, we need to plant ideas and help them grow. Teaching the next generation is key to change. Sustainability needs to be a way of thinking integrated into curriculums. I developed and taught a course called Thinking Green at the Boston Architectural College. The course is required for Interior Design students. In it we explore how things are made, how they affect our health and how we may design differently. The final project asks the students to redesign one of their favorite spaces to be more sustainable. A highlight for me was a student who started redesigning her loft apartment in Boston’s Chinatown and ultimately proposed turning the roofs in the entire neighborhood into an agricultural zone and the storefronts into markets to sell the food grown above. That’s what I call Thinking Green!

Q: What is next in sustainability?

I believe we will see more regulations and a lot of what we think of as being “sustainable” and different today will become mandated by code. Just like people are beginning to ask what is in their food, where it comes from and who makes it, people will begin to demand answers to similar questions for the building products they buy. I think increased transparency in the impacts of our building products is inevitable. I hope we will move beyond disputes about rating systems and return to fundamental questions like those established by the Natural Step, which I simplify into: what are we taking from the earth, what are we making, how are we managing the resources, and are we being fair?

For me, what’s next is a little unclear. I’ve always said that my ultimate goal was not to be needed. I believe that we are at a time when most planning and design firms know how to build sustainably. What we need now are more owners wanting to push the limits. After

nine years of accelerating sustainability at Sasaki, I’ve decided to switch gears and form The Elbaum Group. We will work directly with organizations to explore sustainability issues specific to them. In April, I became a mom to a little boy which makes thinking about what’s next in sustainability even more important.

Meet other Changemakers like Meredith

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Melissa Vernon

Changemakers: Mara Baum

As we work along our sustainability journey, we have the pleasure of meeting many individuals and firms that are leading great change. We have enjoyed our relationship with them and want to share their stories with you. This series will feature individuals leading the sustainability movement within the architecture and design community. This next generation of leaders found their passion for sustainability early in their careers and have based their profession on advocating and leading for a more sustainable future.

Mara Baum is HOK’s Healthcare Sustainable Design Leader. Her role includes overseeing sustainability implementation, consulting, research and education across our global healthcare practice. It’s no small task, as healthcare makes up nearly a third of HOK’s overall work. She works on many of the firm’s biggest hospital projects, and outside of those assignments,

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regularly mentors teams and educates her colleagues. In addition to her healthcare role, Baum also leads HOK’s

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internal firmwide efforts on sustainability education.

Q: Tell us about a specific project where you felt you really made a difference or did something innovative in sustainability.

Right now I’m working on Kaiserslautern Military Community Medical Center, a joint US/German government hospital in southern Germany. It’s an unusual project on many levels, including the fact that it needs to meet the most stringent of both US and German codes and regulations. This includes the US government requirement for LEED for Healthcare Silver minimum and the many German regulations associated with energy efficiency, renewable energy, daylighting, habitat protection and many others. This facility will be far more energy efficient than a typical US hospital while offering views to all regularly occupied spaces. The project site provides places of respite and exercise opportunities for building occupants while also fully treating and infiltrating all rainwater into the aquifer below. Bringing the best of US and German sustainability thinking together is helping us to create a whole new paradigm for green healthcare design.

Q: What is next in sustainability?

I think we’re about to see a transparency explosion, along with a conservative backlash and probably some of political fallout. The transparency revolution will address measured data for building energy and water use as well as the make-up of building materials. The latter is starting to really bubble up. Many of us have been concerned about the unnecessary use of brominated and hydrogenated flame retardants for years, but the recent Chicago Tribune expose has finally grabbed mainstream attention – a group of legislators have even petitioned Congress to conduct a full investigation. This is just one nasty substance of probably thousands, but it will hopefully shed light on the inadequacies of our current system for protecting unknowing consumers from harmful products.

Q: What’s your BHAG (“big hairy audacious goal”) regarding sustainability-related efforts in your organization?

I want to see a day in which hospitals have little or no negative impact on the health of our occupants, communities and natural environments. This means net positive energy and water use and waste generation, all healthy building materials, fully integrated natural systems, and more. We have a really long way to go! We have to start somewhere, though, and there’s no time like the present.

Q: Have any of your recent travels inspired your work?

Last month I spent several weeks in Australia on vacation. I spent time in Melbourne, Sydney and Queensland, so I got to check out some of the best of the country’s natural and built environments. One highlight, of course, was the Sydney Opera House. It tells the story of sustainability from the perspective of longevity as a cultural icon, and it also was once a Big Hairy Audacious Goal – the team still had no idea how to structure the roof “sails” even after construction began. A mid-stream revelation on the part of Jørn Utzon, the design architect, in collaboration with Ove Arup resulted in the built form we know and love today.

I am just as inspired about my wilderness adventures as my urban ones. I hike, camp and backpack regularly around California, and Australia was a great place to bring this hobby. There’s nothing like snorkeling the Great Barrier Reef or hiking deep in the jungle or high in the Grampians mountain range to remind me why I do this kind of work. One of my highlights was a cassowary sighting – they’re supposedly the most dangerous bird in the world, and this was the only time I’ve ever seen an endangered species in the wild. I also saw wild emu, kangaroos, sharks, and tons of exotic fish and birds.

Meet other Changemakers like Mara

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