Design for Integration—Framework for Design Excellence

Good design elevates any project, no matter how small, with a thoughtful process that delivers both beauty and function in balance. It is the element that binds all the principles together with a big idea.

Design for Integration - Berkeley Public Library

David Wakeley

Framework for Design Excellence: Design for Integration

Focus topics

Design for Integration toolkit

High impact

If you can only do one (or a few) thing(s):

Best practices

Beauty & delight

As individuals, we intake information through our senses, creating awareness (perception) and then processing that information into our understanding (cognition). The more senses we connect with, the more firmly we can experience a space and become attached to it. The more people attached to the building or place, the more likely the building will be celebrated and preserved over time.

Actions:

When choosing materials for a project, ask the following questions:

Central design & performance concept

A shared direction that all stakeholders can rally around will set the stage early for positive outcomes. Document this direction with a design charter, vision statement, or introduction to the owner’s project requirements.

Design actions:

Performance goals:

Connection with place, climate, culture, & people

Understand and take full advantage of everything the site has to offer, from its deep history through the present and throughout the lifetime of the building. Understanding the natural functions of the site, the origins of human occupation, and the conditions that shaped the site may guide design choices.

Actions:

Integrated design process

Use an integrated design process that respects and values multiple viewpoints. This approach to building design requires a multidisciplinary and collaborative team whose members make decisions based on a shared vision. This differs drastically from the previous design and construction approaches in the industry, which tended to operate in fragmented silos.

Actions:

More than two decades of COTE® Top Ten award recipients and their case studies can be accessed online. Use these projects for inspiration of what sustainable design can be and how teams use big ideas to bring together excellence across principles.

Lessons From The Leading Edge report from COTE analyzes trends among 20 years of projects that received a COTE® Top Ten Award.

Whether you call it a charrette, a workshop, or simply a meeting, these suggestions from experts found in BuildingGreen's How To Run a Great Workshop: 37 Tips and Ideas will make your next event more fun and productive.

The thoroughly researched, up-to-date Integration at Its Finest guide for the U.S. General Services Administration takes a deep dive into three different COTE award recipients. It includes a comparative analysis across several categories found in high-performance buildings.

21st Century Development has several resources that describe a continuum of strategies for sustainable development across each principle and includes international case studies.