Think working in an environmentally green building leads to greater satisfaction in the workplace? Think again.
People working in buildings
certified under LEED’s green building standard appear no more satisfied with
the quality of their indoor workplace environments than those toiling in
conventional buildings, according to new research from the University of
California, Berkeley, and the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom.
The work, which counters the
findings of several earlier studies examining the same issue, was done by
Stefano Schiavon, an assistant professor of architecture in sustainability,
energy and environment at UC Berkeley’s Center for the Built Environment (CBE)
and associate professor Sergio Altomonte with the University of Nottingham’s
Environmental Physics and Design Research Group.
The findings were published
in the April issue of the journal Building and Environment and expand on
Schiavon and Altomonte’s previous work on the topic by determining that most
workers do not experience a higher level of workplace satisfaction simply
because they work in LEED certified buildings–regardless of the building
layout, amount of time in the workplace and many other factors.
Schiavon and Altomonte
analyzed the survey responses of 21,477 individuals in 144 mainly large office
buildings, most in the United States. Of those buildings, 65 are LEED
certified. Previous reports by other researchers who reached different
conclusions about worker satisfaction were based on much smaller sample sizes
and different statistical tests.
“Does this mean that green
certification is outdated, just costly or even useless?” asked Schiavon.
“Certainly not, especially given the urgency of the environmental challenge and
the fundamental role of buildings on people health and wellbeing, climate
change and energy security.”
Schiavon and Altomonte did
find that LEED-rated buildings may be more effective in providing higher
occupant satisfaction when occupants are in open spaces rather than in enclosed
offices, and when the buildings are smaller in size.
Occupant satisfaction with
LEED-certified office building environments appears to decline with time, with
the greatest level of satisfaction reported during the first year that a worker
spends in a green building.
One reason for this decline
may be that LEED certification is largely based on predictions, without
measuring real building performance post-construction. Schiavon and Altomonte
said that workplace satisfaction might improve if more design-related
information could be collected by assessing LEED certified buildings based on
actual operations and performance.
They said they hope their
research leads builders and businesses to pay closer attention to:
- Designing strategies and solutions aimed at influencing occupant satisfaction and feelings of health, well-being and job performance as part of the LEED certification process
- Occupant feedback
- The ongoing development of the LEED program towards continuous assessment of building and people performance
The researchers are now
studying the most effective LEED strategies for the improvement of office
worker well-being and plan to report their conclusions in 2015.
Source:
BDC
Network
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