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Building Momentum
NeoCon
Chicago 2004 Preview
Designers focus on sustainable
design the renewable, the reusable and
the reimagined.
If
last years design outlook was about making
do, this years is about possibility. IIDAs
Forum leaders say many trends will hit new heights
quite soon from the recovery of corporate
to the blossoming of sustainable products.
More than any other area,
sustainable design has gone from existing on the
fringe of the design community to being accepted
wholeheartedly by the heavy hitters. With that
in mind, NeoCon Chicago 2004 will boast a slew
of new, innovative green products that support
recyclability and reuse.
Sustainable
Design
With the U.S. governments endorsement of
the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) rating system, there is a new demand for
green products that help to achieve the LEED rating,
says IIDA Sustainable Forum Advisor Ken Wilson,
IIDA, AIA, LEED AP, a Principal at Washington-based
Envision Design. For many manufacturers,
the government is their biggest client. This has
been an incredible motivation for them to redefine
their products.
Wilson
says LEED for Commercial Interiors (LEED-CI) is
an exciting pilot program of about 100 projects,
and it is expected to be released by mid-September.
The projects include spaces such as a health spa,
a restaurant and corporate interiors.
Its
really becoming about high-performance design,
Wilson says. LEED for Existing Buildings and LEED
for Core and Shell Buildings are two other pilot
programs, and there are plans to develop LEED
for Residential and for Retail.
More
often, major furniture manufacturers come up with
new designs that contain recycled content in response
to the LEED explosion. Pieces are being
designed for disassembly, Wilson says. Instead
of a blend, furniture components are made of a
single material all plastic or all metal,
for example. Its about being able to unzip
them, so the components are pre-separated for
recycling. Some new improvements that LEED
is helping to foster are GREENGUARD certification
and FSC-certified wood, he says.
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