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Green Buildings and Health

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2015

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Springer International Publishing
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Allen, Joseph G., Piers MacNaughton, Jose Guillermo Cedeno Laurent, Skye S. Flanigan, Erika Sita Eitland, and John D. Spengler. 2015. “Green Buildings and Health.” Current Environmental Health Reports 2 (3): 250-258. doi:10.1007/s40572-015-0063-y. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40572-015-0063-y.

Abstract

Green building design is becoming broadly adopted, with one green building standard reporting over 3.5 billion square feet certified to date. By definition, green buildings focus on minimizing impacts to the environment through reductions in energy usage, water usage, and minimizing environmental disturbances from the building site. Also by definition, but perhaps less widely recognized, green buildings aim to improve human health through design of healthy indoor environments. The benefits related to reduced energy and water consumption are well-documented, but the potential human health benefits of green buildings are only recently being investigated. The objective of our review was to examine the state of evidence on green building design as it specifically relates to indoor environmental quality and human health. Overall, the initial scientific evidence indicates better indoor environmental quality in green buildings versus non-green buildings, with direct benefits to human health for occupants of those buildings. A limitation of much of the research to date is the reliance on indirect, lagging and subjective measures of health. To address this, we propose a framework for identifying direct, objective and leading “Health Performance Indicators” for use in future studies of buildings and health.

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Green buildings, Indoor environmental quality, Health, Systematic review

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Green Buildings and Health… : DASH Story 2016-05-09
I am an environmental health practitioner involved in sustainable urban development. I work for AECOM, a multinational professional services firm, in their Sydney office, Australia. The interaction of humans and the built interest is of great interest to me and a significant part of my day-to-day work involves working with developers and design teams to optimise buildings for improved health and well-being outcomes. Having information to justify health-based interventions is critical to support evidence-based design. Beyond the well-documented benefits around occupant satisfaction, productivity and reduced absenteeism, I am particularly interested in how better buildings contribute to the the broader wider public health agenda—especially how they can help in the longer term reducing prevalence of disease.