Hospitals Get a Checkup of Their Own
Get ready for another update on green architecture in industries! Today we’re looking at health care industry, specifically green hospital construction.
If you’ve ever heard that going to the hospital can make you sick or sicker, it’s not far from the truth. The structure of the building itself, including construction materials, flooring, and furniture, can be filled with toxic chemicals. This makes it harder for people with already compromised immune systems to get and stay healthy.
“Studies show that patient in green hospitals have greater emotional well-being, require less pain medication and other drugs, and have shorter hospital stays,” says Gail Vittori, a coauthor of Sustainable Healthcare Architecture. Because of this, the Brigham and Women’s Hospital will be featuring large windows to allow more natural light into their new 136-bed cardiac care center.
Another hospital taking the lead in green architecture is Dell Children’s Medical Center of Central Texas. One of the greenest, most healthful hospitals in the U.S., it features safe building materials, energy-efficient lighting, and ventilation. There are six courtyards, a 30,000-square-foot indoor garden, views of the outdoors, and operable windows. Outdoor open space includes a 3-acre healing garden with a reflecting pond and waterfall that use recycled water. The Dell Children’s Medical Center is on target to earn a LEED-Platinum rating. Those benefiting from this hospital’s green approach to health care include the environment, the staff, and the thousands of children who will get better faster in this state-of-the-art facility.
If you would like more information on green design in the health care industry please go to our pod cast and if you want more information on green architecture please go to our website at EDRA.org. Thank you for reading and check back next week for the next post!
EDRA advances and disseminates behavior and design research toward improving understanding of the relationships between people and their environments.
More Car Dealerships Going Green
Welcome to the first Environmental Design Research Association blog entry! The purpose of this blog is to spread information concerning green design and to examine green aspects of industry. This first post is about the automotive industry, specifically about how car dealerships are going green.
Automotive companies aren’t forcing their dealers to go green, but they are giving them guidelines on how to become green. More dealerships are going green because it is becoming profitable. It is well known that having a green building will limit utility costs and therefore, over time, profit could be had. However, a lot of car dealers are realizing that being green is good for business in other ways.
Joe Chrzanowski, executive director of dealer network planning and investment at General Motors, said in “Automotive News”, “They can put the certification sticker on the door or use the environmentally friendly aspect of their facility as part of their marketing.”
While there aren’t many LEED certified dealers because of the long inspection times and over $200,000 in paperwork many are going green. Car companies are embracing green design with their office buildings and their plants and they want the green way of doing things to filter down to the dealerships. Toyota announced at this year’s North American International Auto Show in Detroit that there will six LEED certified Toyota dealerships in the U.S. by the end of the first quarter of 2008. The first car dealership to go green was Pat Lobb’s Toyota dealership in McKinney, Texas.
If you would like more information on green design in the automotive industry please go to our podcast and if you want more information on green architecture please go to our website at EDRA.org. Thank you for reading and check back next week for the next post!
EDRA advances and disseminates behavior and design research toward improving understanding of the relationships between people and their environments.