| Literature DB >> 32888156 |
Louis Rice1, Mark Drane2.
Abstract
The design of the built environment plays an important role as a determinant of health. As a society, we are spending an increasing proportion of our time indoors and now spend over 80% of our life inside, so the design of buildings can greatly impact on human health. Accordingly, architecture health indices (AHIs) are used to evidence the effects on human health associated with the design of buildings. AHIs provide quantitative and empirical data upon which architects, clients, users and other stakeholders might monitor and evaluate the healthiness (or otherwise) of architectural design. A systematic literature review was conducted to reveal the current state of knowledge, reveal gaps, explore potential usage and highlight best practice in this area. Whilst there are a number of different health indicators for the built/urban environments more generally, the scope of this review is limited to the scale of a building and specifically those aspects within the remit of a professional architect. In order to examine the range and characteristics of AHIs currently in use, this review explored three electronic bibliographic databases from January 2008 to January 2019. A two-stage selection was undertaken and screening against eligibility criteria checklist carried out. From 15 included studies, 127 documents were identified, and these included 101 AHI. A sample of the most commonly used AHIs was then analysed at an item level. The review reveals that most AHIs are limited to measuring communicable diseases that directly affect physical health through e.g. air quality or water quality. There are very few indicators focusing on factors affecting mental and social health; given the increase in mental and social health problems, greater focus on AHIs related to these health issues should be included. Furthermore, the research reveals an absence of AHIs that address non-communicable diseases (NCDs). As the majority of all poor health outcomes globally are now related to NCDs, and many are associated with the design of the built environment, there is an urgent need to address this situation.Entities:
Keywords: Architecture; Indicators; Public health; Urban; Wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32888156 PMCID: PMC7704814 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-020-00469-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Summary of included studies (n = 15)
| Reference | Study design (sourced from) | Aim | Potential AHI reviewed | Named AHI reviewed | Other potential AHIs referenced |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamid et al. (2014) | Comparative review (database searches) | Review of existing green building rating tools in Malaysia | Green Globe LEED Green Star NABERS Malaysia specific: GreenRE Green PASS PH JKR GBI | BREEAM HQE CASBEE | |
| Li et al. (2017) | Systematic review (database searches) | Systematic review of comparative analyses of green building assessment methods | BREEAM, UK LEED, USA CASBEE, Japan Green Star, Australia BEAM Plus, Hong Kong Green Mark, Singapore EcoProfile, Norway DGNB, Germany ESGB or GBL, China SB Tool, International EcoEffect ESCALE | - | |
| Suzer (2015) | Comparative analysis (as part of a wider study) (database searches) | To investigate problems arising from the weighting of sustainability concerns with in LEED | LEED BREEAM SB Tool CASBEE Green Star | - | |
| Shari and Soebarto (2017) | Literature review (as part of a wider study) (database searches) | Development of sustainability building performance assessment framework for offices in Malaysia | BREEAM LEED Green Star Green Mark CASBEE GBI | - | |
| Shari and Soebarto (2015) | Comparative review (reference hand search) | Investigate effectiveness of existing building performance assessment systems (BPAS) and their appropriateness for use in Malaysia | BREEAM LEED SB Tool Green Star Green Mark LEED-India GBES GBI Greenship | - | |
| Retzlaff (2008) | Content analysis (reference hand search) | Developing a framework to support planners in selecting building assessment systems | EarthCraft Enterprise Community Partners Communities Criteria Green Globes American Lung Association Health House Program LEED (several variants) NAHB Green Building Guidelines | - | |
| Lee (2013) | Comparative review (reference hand search) | Comprehensive review of five building environmental assessment schemes | BREEAM LEED CASBEE BEAM Plus ESGB | BEPAC, Canada EMAS, Europe GBBC, Korea SBAT, South Africa Green Building Labelling, Taiwan CHEERS, USA Green Building Program, USA SB Tool, international | |
| Alyami and Rezgui (2012) | Comparative review (reference hand search) | Identify similarities and differences between globally prevalent environmental assessment methods, with a view to identifying essential criteria for new schemes including in Saudi Arabia | BREEAM LEED SB Tool CASBEE | - | |
| Sev (2011) | Comparative analysis (reference hand search) | Investigating the use of most widely used building environmental assessment (BEA) tools and their effectiveness when taken from country of origin and used in developing countries | BREEAM CEEQUAL LEED CASBEE Green Star SB Tool | EcoProfile PromisE, Finland Green Mark HK-BEAM CEPAS, Hong Kong Green Star SBAT Environmental Status, Sweden | |
| Haapio and Viitaniemi (2008) | Critical review (reference hand search) | Analysing and categorising existing building environmental assessment tools | ATHENATM Environmental Impact Estimator Building Environmental Assessment Tool (BEAT) BeCost Building for Environment and Economic Sustainability (BEES) BREEAM EcoEffect Eco-Profile Eco-Quantum Envest 2 Environmental Status Model EQUER ESCALE LEGEP Leadership in Energy and Design (LEED) Programmation et Analyse de Projets d’Ouvrages et d’Opérations Soucieux de l’Environnement (PAPOOSE) TEAM | - | |
| Say and Wood (2008) | Industry report/review (reference hand search) | Investigate similarities and differences between four predominant ranking systems | Green Star BREEAM CASBEE LEED Green Globes | - | |
| Illankoon et al. (2017) | Comparative analysis (reference hand search) | Evaluate the effectiveness of green building rating tools to assess sustainability in buildings by environmental, economic, and social criteria | America: LEED Europe: BREEAM Asia Pacific: BEAM Plus (Hong Kong) Green Mark (Singapore) CASBEE (Japan) GBI (Malaysia) IGBC (India) Green Star (Australia) | - | |
| Danish Building Research Institute, GXN and 3XN Architects (2012) | Practice guidance (grey lit search) | Provide a comparative overview of key building certifications, with a focus on geographies where Danish practitioners may work | Refer full text | - | |
| GRESB (2018) | Certification list (grey lit search) | A list of provisionally validated building certification schemes recognised within the GRESB Real Estate Assessment investment benchmark | Refer full text | - | |
| World Green Building Council (no date) | Website list (grey lit search) | A list of building certification schemes, only those managed by Green Building Councils worldwide | Refer full text |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow—included studies
Fig. 2PRISMA flow—included AHIs
Summary of included health criteria within widely used AHI
| AHI/concept | No. of included health criteria |
|---|---|
| LEED | 9 |
| Indoor environmental quality | 9 |
| BREEAM | 4 |
| Health and wellbeing | 4 |
| CASBEE | 18 |
| LR: environmental load reduction of building | 1 |
| Q: environmental quality of building | 17 |
| Green Star | 19 |
| Emissions | 1 |
| Indoor environment quality | 17 |
| Land use and ecology | 1 |
| BEAM Plus | 20 |
| Site aspects (SA) | 1 |
| Water use (WU) | 1 |
| Indoor environmental quality (IEQ) | 18 |
| SB tool | 36 |
| D indoor environmental quality | 18 |
| E service quality | 14 |
| F social, cultural and perceptual aspects | 4 |
| Well Building Standard | 128 |
| Air | 44 |
| Comfort | 22 |
| Fitness | 10 |
| Light | 18 |
| Mind | 14 |
| Nourishment | 6 |
| Water | 14 |
| Fitwel | 29 |
| 4. Entrances and ground floor | 6 |
| 5. Stairwells | 5 |
| 6. Indoor environment | 2 |
| 7. Workspaces | 3 |
| 8. Shared spaces | 7 |
| 9. Water supply | 2 |
| 10. Food services | 1 |
| 11. Vending machines and snack bars | 1 |
| 12. Emergency procedures | 2 |
| Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome |
| And | And | And | And |
| [any] | HCMT | [any] | [any] |
| Study design | “Systematic review” “Meta analysis” “Literature review” “Review of the literature” “Comparative review” “Critical comparison” | Date range | 01/01/2008–present** |
| Language | English | Publication type | Peer reviewed journals |
*Specific syntax and filters vary by database. For example, Medline (Ovid interface) only allows full year search
**Searches conducted 25 January 2019