What are the best Certifications to pursue in order to become a better Architect? Will clients value the same ones that archtiects will? is LEED still relevant or useful? thoughts on WELL?
See title. I have discussed LEED with some architects in my firm and they think clients value it but it is less than practically helpful or relevant as architects should be designing sustainably by default.
Are there other certifications worth looking at? Some additional letters after my name would be great but I would like them to be practically useful to gain relevant experience. Thoughts?
Clients are fairly straightforward in what they want. They want efficient buildings. They want low cost buildings. They want buildings to last a set amount of time.
Employers want people who know how to give clients what they want. So, if you feel there's a certification that helps you gain the ability to give clients what they want, go for it. I don't carry any certifications currently. They're all money grabs. Studying the material is fine. After that, I don't see any reason to keep paying someone to prove to others I'm knowledgeable.
Nov 7, 19 11:57 am ·
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titslip
This is true about employers vs clients; I think I should have added "clients and/or RFP reviewers" as having an RA for example after your name can be helpful to win projects.
Nov 8, 19 8:38 am ·
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titslip
yes, I meant additional RA's on project team under the/a Principal who is an RA
.
The best certifications are those that help you provide a better service to your client. What's the point of becoming LEED credentialed if the only thing you are doing is designing singe family homes? What's the point of getting HERS (Home Energy Rating System) certified if you're only designing schools? It may be good if you want to do both, but unless you're doing both, it makes no sense, other than doing it for your own personal and professional benefit. Not only does it cost money to get, but you also have to maintain continuing education to keep it (also $$$)
Take a passive house course. It's the way the building and energy codes are pushing us and the detailing and attention to quality building practices are simply a good reference.
Nov 8, 19 1:07 pm ·
·
athensarch
2nd’ed. The course is about a week, then ~3wks of study. FAIAs I took it with got something out of it, and I did as well.
Nov 8, 19 1:18 pm ·
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athensarch
We’re seeing clients start to request it for higher ed (mainly dorms). At my firm the PMs told me don’t do LEED unless you want to be the paperwork person. I see LEED as a base umbrella cou
rse, with other specializations pushing the envelope more.
Nov 8, 19 1:22 pm ·
·
titslip
this is interesting and something I'm surprised to only have heard minimally about in passing, but will look into.
Nov 8, 19 4:26 pm ·
·
whistler
It's all the rage here and building codes will make passive house / net zero mandatory by 2032, but Passive House standard (at least for small buildings) in about 10 years. Bottom line it makes sense in our part of the world but because it is a performance standard it works in warm and cool climates unlike LEED of similar which is heavy on the administrative side and isn't consistent.
Nov 8, 19 5:38 pm ·
·
whistler
Passive House as in; "Passivhaus as a voluntary standard for energy efficiency in a building, which reduces the building's ecological footprint. It results in ultra-low energy buildings that require little energy for space heating or cooling"
Nov 8, 19 6:03 pm ·
·
whistler
Passive solar design can be part of the strategy but in many parts of the world passive solar gain is a problem as the heating load is so great that the introduction of cooling strategies is necessary, ie Arizona or even Northern Canada where the winter sun can provide a great deal of solar gain. the introduction of air conditioning goes against the overall Passive House strategy as Air Con requires a huge energy requirement and therefore increase one's energy footprint. The strategy is really about finding balance between heating and cooling with as little energy use as possible .... Simplified concept is that it comes down to air tightness and increased
insulation.
Nov 8, 19 6:08 pm ·
·
Non Sequitur
Whistler, I’ve been casually considering passivehauss. Is there cross over from it’s focus on small buildings to larger commercial ones?
Nov 8, 19 6:15 pm ·
·
whistler
Yes, more complicated but there are precedents for large MF housing, community centres, fire halls and small industrial buildings. Building use becomes more of an issue due to movement in and out of building which impacts the control of the "conditioned" environment. Exact same principals as a small residential building but definitely a more complicated strategy above and beyond the standard benchmark that those building might normal be designed to.
Nov 8, 19 6:23 pm ·
·
athensarch
Non Sequitur, check out the Cornell Tech dorm as a larger precedent. It's a 26 story ~350 unit Passive House building.
I'll second the Passive House recommendation. It's only getting more popular, and the training is actually pretty useful. There are two different organizations providing training and certification, PHIUS (passive house US) and iPHA, the original, international version. There are pros and cons to both but at the end of the day they're pretty similar. I did the international training but would probably do the US one if I were to choose today.
Nov 8, 19 1:20 pm ·
·
titslip
I'm curious as to why you recommend PHIUS over the iPHA (via PHI?) certification. I'm assuming it covers more typical us construction techniques and materials. I would immediately go for the PHIUS, but it requires a 5-day in-person training as part of the certification which may be hard to swing. Does the international certification cater at all to specific regions or US building standards?
Nov 12, 19 9:25 am ·
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Wood Guy
From what I understand, WUFI Passive, the energy modeling program that PHIUS uses has a graphic interface and is more user-friendly, especially for visually oriented people, than the PHPP, which is a giant spreadsheet with many data inputs and many opportunities for error. The PHPP is metric-based; there is an alternate version that uses IP units instead of metric but it can be clunky. Plus WUFI provides hygrothermal analysis of assemblies, useful and likely to be important in high performance buildings where moisture accumulation is more likely to cause problems than it is in typical, crappy buildings.
PHIUS was the first to launch climate-specific requirements, but PHI now has something along those lines as well, but I'm not up to date as it's a newer feature.
My personal issue with PHIUS is that they took the name of a program created by someone else and put together their own, similar but different program, but kept the same name. I find it that to be morally wrong and it has caused a lot of confusion in the market.
In about a decade of practice, not one single client has even asked about LEED, never mind requested it as a certification. I've managed about $200M in built work over that time. Nobody really cares.
Nov 8, 19 9:46 pm ·
·
BulgarBlogger
Probablys ome corporate or retail clients who only care about their branding... residential domestic and international highrise developers don't care much either.
"JPMorgan Chase announced today that it has achieved the highest possible rating, LEED® Platinum, from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) for the renovation of its global headquarters at 270 Park Avenue in Manhattan, making it the world's largest renovation project to achieve Platinum ...Jan 18, 2012"
Then Jamie Dimond decided to tear it down. Mayor De Blasio and the AIA agreed.
Nov 14, 19 7:37 am ·
·
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What are the best Certifications to pursue in order to become a better Architect? Will clients value the same ones that archtiects will? is LEED still relevant or useful? thoughts on WELL?
See title. I have discussed LEED with some architects in my firm and they think clients value it but it is less than practically helpful or relevant as architects should be designing sustainably by default.
Are there other certifications worth looking at? Some additional letters after my name would be great but I would like them to be practically useful to gain relevant experience. Thoughts?
Employers seem to care far more than clients.
Clients are fairly straightforward in what they want. They want efficient buildings. They want low cost buildings. They want buildings to last a set amount of time.
Employers want people who know how to give clients what they want. So, if you feel there's a certification that helps you gain the ability to give clients what they want, go for it. I don't carry any certifications currently. They're all money grabs. Studying the material is fine. After that, I don't see any reason to keep paying someone to prove to others I'm knowledgeable.
This is true about employers vs clients; I think I should have added "clients and/or RFP reviewers" as having an RA for example after your name can be helpful to win projects.
yes, I meant additional RA's on project team under the/a Principal who is an RA .
The best certifications are those that help you provide a better service to your client. What's the point of becoming LEED credentialed if the only thing you are doing is designing singe family homes? What's the point of getting HERS (Home Energy Rating System) certified if you're only designing schools? It may be good if you want to do both, but unless you're doing both, it makes no sense, other than doing it for your own personal and professional benefit. Not only does it cost money to get, but you also have to maintain continuing education to keep it (also $$$)
Take a passive house course. It's the way the building and energy codes are pushing us and the detailing and attention to quality building practices are simply a good reference.
2nd’ed. The course is about a week, then ~3wks of study. FAIAs I took it with got something out of it, and I did as well.
We’re seeing clients start to request it for higher ed (mainly dorms). At my firm the PMs told me don’t do LEED unless you want to be the paperwork person. I see LEED as a base umbrella cou
rse, with other specializations pushing the envelope more.
this is interesting and something I'm surprised to only have heard minimally about in passing, but will look into.
It's all the rage here and building codes will make passive house / net zero mandatory by 2032, but Passive House standard (at least for small buildings) in about 10 years. Bottom line it makes sense in our part of the world but because it is a performance standard it works in warm and cool climates unlike LEED of similar which is heavy on the administrative side and isn't consistent.
Passive House as in; "Passivhaus as a voluntary standard for energy efficiency in a building, which reduces the building's ecological footprint. It results in ultra-low energy buildings that require little energy for space heating or cooling"
Passive solar design can be part of the strategy but in many parts of the world passive solar gain is a problem as the heating load is so great that the introduction of cooling strategies is necessary, ie Arizona or even Northern Canada where the winter sun can provide a great deal of solar gain. the introduction of air conditioning goes against the overall Passive House strategy as Air Con requires a huge energy requirement and therefore increase one's energy footprint. The strategy is really about finding balance between heating and cooling with as little energy use as possible .... Simplified concept is that it comes down to air tightness and increased insulation.
Whistler, I’ve been casually considering passivehauss. Is there cross over from it’s focus on small buildings to larger commercial ones?
Yes, more complicated but there are precedents for large MF housing, community centres, fire halls and small industrial buildings. Building use becomes more of an issue due to movement in and out of building which impacts the control of the "conditioned" environment. Exact same principals as a small residential building but definitely a more complicated strategy above and beyond the standard benchmark that those building might normal be designed to.
Non Sequitur, check out the Cornell Tech dorm as a larger precedent. It's a 26 story ~350 unit Passive House building.
Fxfowle also did a feasibility study on it for tall resi https://www.nypassivehouse.org/passivhaus-feasibility-study-released/
Will do. Thanks.
I'll second the Passive House recommendation. It's only getting more popular, and the training is actually pretty useful. There are two different organizations providing training and certification, PHIUS (passive house US) and iPHA, the original, international version. There are pros and cons to both but at the end of the day they're pretty similar. I did the international training but would probably do the US one if I were to choose today.
I'm curious as to why you recommend PHIUS over the iPHA (via PHI?) certification. I'm assuming it covers more typical us construction techniques and materials. I would immediately go for the PHIUS, but it requires a 5-day in-person training as part of the certification which may be hard to swing. Does the international certification cater at all to specific regions or US building standards?
From what I understand, WUFI Passive, the energy modeling program that PHIUS uses has a graphic interface and is more user-friendly, especially for visually oriented people, than the PHPP, which is a giant spreadsheet with many data inputs and many opportunities for error. The PHPP is metric-based; there is an alternate version that uses IP units instead of metric but it can be clunky. Plus WUFI provides hygrothermal analysis of assemblies, useful and likely to be important in high performance buildings where moisture accumulation is more likely to cause problems than it is in typical, crappy buildings.
PHIUS was the first to launch climate-specific requirements, but PHI now has something along those lines as well, but I'm not up to date as it's a newer feature.
My personal issue with PHIUS is that they took the name of a program created by someone else and put together their own, similar but different program, but kept the same name. I find it that to be morally wrong and it has caused a lot of confusion in the market.
In about a decade of practice, not one single client has even asked about LEED, never mind requested it as a certification. I've managed about $200M in built work over that time. Nobody really cares.
Probablys ome corporate or retail clients who only care about their branding... residential domestic and international highrise developers don't care much either.
"JPMorgan Chase announced today that it has achieved the highest possible rating, LEED® Platinum, from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) for the renovation of its global headquarters at 270 Park Avenue in Manhattan, making it the world's largest renovation project to achieve Platinum ...Jan 18, 2012"
Then Jamie Dimond decided to tear it down. Mayor De Blasio and the AIA agreed.
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