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Features   BusinessWeek/Architectural Record Awards 2003
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Designing for well-being:
Environments that enhance the quality of life

Past Awards
• 2004 Awards
• 2002 Awards
• 2001 Awards

As C.E.O.s increasingly think of the design of their company's buildings as a way to achieve strategic corporate goals, scientists are demonstrating that highly effective working environments don't happen by accident. Resulting from clearly articulated goals, good building design can significantly enhance the well-being and productivity of workers. Architects can fulfill this objective by creating environments that sustain occupants in the many positive ways evidenced by the winning designs in the 2003 BW/AR Awards program. Dr. Judith H. Heerwagen, an environmental psychologist, suggests that many factors determined by the design of buildings, including exposure to nature and daylight, air quality, temperature, noise, ergonomics, and opportunities for social gathering, relaxation, and exercise affect occupants' performance and well-being. If we consider that, first and foremost, buildings are habitats for people, then businesses, builders, and developers should be inclined to invest in even the more costly staff and client amenities that promise measurable positive payoffs.

Yet, despite this conclusion, when it comes to facility decisions, costs are almost always the predominant consideration, partly because sparse scientific evidence links features of the built environment to organizational success. This situation is changing—not only because of the work of Dr. Heerwagen and others, but also through such agencies as the AIA’s Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture, which in July received a $100,000 Latrobe Fellowship from AIA’s fellows to pursue research into how the human brain perceives architecture. Just one more step toward shedding light on how buildings inform our daily lives.

—Jane Kolleeny

Winners
Orange Innovations
Cambridge, Mass.
Anmahian Winton Architects
Hotel Habita
Mexico City
TEN Arquitectos
Sekii Ladies Clinic
Furukawa, Japan
Atelier Hitoshi Abe
  Start-Up Offices
GrĄZch, Switzerland
Barkow Leibinger Architects
Inn at Price Tower
Bartlesville, Okla.
Wendy Evans Joseph Architecture / Ambler Architects
  Darwin Centre
London
HOK International
Apple SoHo
New York City
Bohlin Cywinski Jackson / Ronnette Riley Architect
  Stealth/Ogilvy
Culver City, Calif.
Eric Owen Moss Architects
Gannett/USA Today Corporate Headquarters
McLean, Va.
Kohn Pedersen Fox Assocs.
  ImageNet
Oklahoma City
Elliott + Associates Architects
Finalists
Automated Trading Desk Technology Campus
Mt. Pleasant, S.C.
Helfand Myerberg Guggenheimer Architects
  Jackson-Triggs Niagara Estate Winery
Ontario, Canada
Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects
University of Washington
Bothell, Wash.
NBBJ
  Herman Miller MarketPlace
Zeeland, Mich.
Integrated Architecture
Beacon Communications Office
Tokyo, Japan
Klein Dytham Architecture /
The Design Studio
  New Academic Complex, Baruch College, CUNY
New York City
Kohn Pedersen Fox Assoc. / Castro-Blanco Piscioneri
Mott Children's Center
Puyallup, Wash.
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca
     
Unbuilt Projects
Great Harbor Design Center
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Gary Shoemaker Architects
     

For more information or to request a call for entry for the 2004 BW/AR Awards, send an e-mail to bwarawards@aia.org or call (888) 242-4240.

 

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