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Buildings of the Future: it’s time to rethink the bottom line
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12 October 2017 - The availability
of measurement models that accurately reflect return-on-investment
(ROI) is often the biggest hurdle in the design, construction and
maintenance of Buildings of the Future.
A revolution in the construction and maintenance of buildings of the
future is not being adequately reflected in traditional Return on
Investment (ROI) business cases, and according to a new report by
global engineering and infrastructure advisory company Aurecon, this is
blocking important forward looking design innovations and significantly
damaging the future value of major building investments.
The short term focus on start-up and construction costs is denying
investors and building owners access to the design innovations that are
increasingly key to the construction of digitally smart, ‘intelligent’
buildings which are able to use technology to dramatically improve
operational efficiencies, employee productivity and reduce maintenance
costs.
In a recent white paper released by Aurecon, titled ‘Buildings of the
Future: bottom-line benefits’, a new narrative around the ROI of
intelligent buildings is explored to demonstrate the crippling effect
that a short-term focus on start-up and construction costs often has on
design innovation.
According to Aurecon, the property and
construction industry is evolving dramatically as digital disruption,
changed building practices and the need to respond to climate change
and reduce energy consumption impact the sector. Yet many building
owners and investors are locked into relying on more traditional ROI
metrics, designing for the short term while ignoring the importance of
designing buildings for the longer term.
The company has called for a new ROI model which accounts for financial
as well as non-financial benefits such as improving employee
productivity and wellbeing, while maintain design flexibility to plan
for a rapidly changing future.
Aurecon’s experience highlights that while Buildings of the Future have
marginally higher start-up costs (2-6% more expensive than traditional
buildings) in the short term, they can deliver significant savings,
with a good ROI being achieved quickly (six months to two years) if
focus is given to heating, ventilation, air conditioning (HVAC),
lighting and some types of electrical loads, with a reduction in
operating costs against traditional buildings of between 10-50%.
Their experience also points out reductions in maintenance costs of
between 8-12%, the increases in employee productivity of 10%, and the
ability of landlords to charge 5% more for premium property rentals of
these innovative new buildings.
Long-term thinking
Aurecon calls for a ROI model that reflects the importance of designing
buildings for the long term and looks at both the financial and
non-financial benefits of intelligent buildings, such as improving
employee productivity and wellbeing, while maintaining design
flexibility to plan for a rapidly changing future.
Long-term thinking can help companies avoid potential disruption. The
importance of designing for the longer term and for changing space
requirements was never better illustrated than when well known
architect Norman Foster admitted that he had got it wrong with Apple’s
Campus 2 and its massive underground carpark for 11 000 cars by not
allowing for retrofitting into habitable spaces as garages become less
important and transportation patterns evolved.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]Legislation
can also present significant disruption for those who don’t invest in
the right tools and methodologies from the outset. For example, the
European Commission is currently proposing a voluntary scheme for
rating the ‘smart readiness’ of buildings. The scheme, which is
expected to be adopted by the end of 2019, will include the development
of a Smart Readiness Indicator (SRI), which will measure a building’s
capacity to use ICT and electronic systems to optimise operation and
interact with the grid.
The changing nature of construction
The ROI on a 3D printed building, for instance, is almost immediate,
with its parts integrated into a digital model of the building that
makes maintenance very easy. Beyond construction and maintenance, these
embedded digital parts also capture and monitor consumption and usage
to optimise building performance over the long term.
A holistic approach
According to Aurecon, based on these non-financial factors, Buildings
of the Future demand a more robust evaluation of their ROI.
Intelligent buildings are the quintessence of future-ready
architecture, but their true value lies in innovation and a shared
vision, which necessitates moving away from old, one-dimensional models
of measuring ROI, to synergetic models that encourage and thrive on
collaboration throughout the entire lifecycle, starting at the design
stage.
Read ‘Buildings of the Future: bottom-line benefits’ here
https://www.aurecongroup.com/en/markets/property/buildings-of-the-future.aspx
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