Skip to content

Green Opinions

Buildings can be smarter, but are we up to the challenge?

by Wayne Balta 05 Sep 2012
Buildings can be smarter, but are we up to the challenge?

Metropolitan Museum of Art; Credit: © Shutterstock

Crumbling bridges and roads are not the only failing infrastructure around us. Many buildings where we work, play or live are crying for help - and it's time to listen.

Buildings in need of an infrastructure update demand significant natural resources and generate pollution that can be lessened. The United States National Science and Technology Council estimates that commercial and residential buildings consume one-third of the world's energy. In North America, for example this translates to 72% of the electricity generation, 12% of the water use, and 60% of non-industrial waste. And if worldwide energy use trends continue, buildings will become the largest consumer of global energy by 2025 ― more than the transportation and industrial sectors combined.

Opportunities to improve the infrastructure of our buildings was a major topic of discussion in March at the second meeting of the Innovations for Environmental Sustainability Council, which IBM formed with the World Environment Center and companies including Boeing, CH2M Hill, Coca-Cola, Dow Chemical, F. Hoffman-La Roche, General Motors, Ingersoll Rand, Johnson & Johnson and Walt Disney.

Buildings emit more harmful carbon dioxide emissions into the environment than cars. Energy costs alone represent about 30 percent of an office building's total operating costs. What's more, up to 50 percent of energy and water used in buildings is wasted. These issues are accelerated by worldwide urbanization; and while 85 percent of companies say they are focused on sustainability, only 30 percent are collecting data with enough frequency to make changes.

The sustainability of buildings is a growing priority as companies, property owners, builders, utility companies and local governments work to meet the demands of a sustainable future. By adding a layer of intelligence, elements of a building - temperature, electricity consumption, ventilation, water consumption, waste management, telecommunications, and physical security - can be integrated for better management and control.

The vast majority of buildings in this country were built before turn of the century - I'm referring to the 21st century, the point in time when it became possible to analyze vast amounts of data from sensors to make the world's systems work better, from the traffic on our roads to the water in our reservoirs.

With the proliferation of sensors and control systems over the last decade, many buildings now can sense, measure and see the exact condition of practically everything in them. This can drive efficiency, save money and advance sustainability.

Such technologies can manage office buildings, museums, warehouses, factories, power plants, campuses, resorts, and even entire neighborhoods. Technology is being used to protect priceless works of art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Louvre. The U.S. Air Force is automating facilities management and infrastructure maintenance across 170 locations worldwide. The project spans more than 626 million square feet of real estate, over 100 million square yards of airfield pavement and 10 million acres of land.

While the unprecedented proliferation of smart sensors and control systems is enabling buildings to sense, measure and see the exact condition of practically everything in them, but these systems often operate independently.

Understanding a building from a holistic point of view requires collaboration between the facilities management team and the CIO's office. People must embrace a cultural shift and develop new skills to manage a building's complex "system of systems" spanning operations and IT.

This shift challenges organizations to think past short-term repairs and take a long-term view of infrastructure requirements. The so-called green building movement uses environmentally preferable materials and construction techniques to be environmentally friendly, but that's only part of the equation. Institutions can construct or retrofit buildings that capitalize on new, analytical insights derived from the wealth of data generated by the infrastructure itself, and they can subsequently operate and maintain buildings more efficiently as well.

Today's leaders are blazing new trails, making buildings and infrastructure systems more efficient and sustainable. The good news is that the key enabler for real change now exists. People want it. The technology is here. And the planet is hungry for innovation.

Wayne S. Balta

Article written by: Wayne S. Balta

Trending Eco-Friendly Clothing

Love My Planet Women's Relaxed Fit Hoodie
Earth
Quick Add
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Love My Planet Women's Relaxed Fit Hoodie
Love My Planet women's eco-friendly relaxed fit hoodieSize Guide Centimeters 8 10 12 14 16 18 Bust 84 88 92 97 103 108 Waist 66 70 75 80 85 91 Hips 91 95 99 104 109 116 Bust: Measure around the fullest part of...
£38.00
£38.00
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Penguins Hate Push-Ups Men's Pullover Hoodie
Earth
Quick Add
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Penguins Hate Push-Ups Men's Pullover Hoodie
Penguins Hate Push-Ups men's eco-friendly pullover HoodieSize Guide Centimeters XS S M L XL XXL Height 171 175 179 183 189 195 Chest 86 93 99 104 116 129 Waist 71 76 81 89 99 112 Chest: Measure all round your chest just below...
£38.00
£38.00
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Lightning Bolt Kids Long Sleeve T-Shirt
Earth
Quick Add
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Notify me
Lightning Bolt Kids Long Sleeve T-Shirt
Lightning Bolt kids eco-friendly long sleeve t-shirtSize Guide Centimeters 3-4yrs 5-6yrs 7-8yrs 9-10yrs 11-12yrs Height 98 112 125 136 147 Chest 60 66 70 75 84 Chest: Measure all around your chest just below your armpits. Height: Your natural height If you fall between...
£18.00
£18.00
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Notify me
Union Jack Tote Bag
Earth
Quick Add
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Union Jack Tote Bag
Union Jack eco-friendly colour tote bagProduct Specification Organic Cotton Tote Bag. Twill Weave (170gsm). 37 x 42 cm (7cm gusset.) Made in India / Designed on the Isle of Wight. Wash Cool, Hang Dry.
£16.00
£16.00
Close
Notify me
Notify me
Prev Post
Next Post

Eco-Friendly Shop

Women's Clothing

Eco-Friendly Clothing for Women Our online shop offers a wide range of sustainable women’s clothing products, including t-shirts, hoodies, vests, sweaters, shorts, and...
Shop Now

Men's Clothing

Eco-Friendly Clothing for Men Our online shop offers a wide range of sustainable men’s clothing products, including t-shirts, hoodies, vests, sweaters, shorts, and...
Shop Now

Kids Clothing

Eco-Friendly Clothes for Kids Our online shop offers a wide range of sustainable kids clothing products, including t-shirts, hoodies and jumpers. Our garments...
Shop Now
Someone recently bought a
[time] ago, from [location]

Thanks for subscribing!

This email has been registered!

Shop the look

Choose Options

Earth Times
Sign up for exclusive updates, new arrivals & insider only discounts

Recently Viewed

Edit Option
Back In Stock Notification
this is just a warning
Login
Shopping Cart
0 items

Before you leave...

Take 20% off your first order

20% off

Enter the code below at checkout to get 20% off your first order

CODESALE20

Continue Shopping