Redefining Sustainable Design: The New AIA COTE Measures

Redefining Sustainable Design: The New AIA COTE Measures
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The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Committee on the Environment (COTE) is the oldest U.S. program dedicated to sustainable design. In 1997, COTE introduced its annual Top Ten Awards, “the profession's best known recognition program for sustainable design excellence” (AIA), to celebrate exemplary projects and give the industry guidance on how to integrate green building principles. In 2015, to mark its 25th anniversary, COTE embarked on a landmark research initiative to study the first two decades of Top Ten, published in 2016 as Lessons from the Leading Edge. Part of the research was to revisit the program’s criteria of evaluation, known as the COTE Measures of Sustainable Design. The result of this effort was to overhaul the program with a completely new set of principles and metrics. The 2017 Top Ten Awards are the first year to use new criteria such as economic impact and more robust metrics for health and resilience. In this presentation, Z Smith, Lance Hosey of Harley Ellis Devereaux, and Mary Ann Lazarus of MALeco presented the new criteria to a packed crowd at the 2017 Greenbuild International Conference and Expo and engaged the audience in a lively discussion about what defines sustainable design.

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