Abstract
Architects and designers, along with their corporate clients, generally embrace the importance of environmental stewardship, saving the earth’s ecosystem, and sustainable design. However, research is needed to link sustainable design with relevant human behavior (e.g., in corporate offices and educational settings) to ensure its enduring legacy. Regarding changing people’s behavior, the majority of human experience results from unconscious processes, i.e., brain–environment interactions not available to awareness; thus, in general, people cannot articulate the nature of these associations. Using theoretical roots stemming from William James and running through ecological psychology (e.g., James J. Gibson to Roger Barker), Harry Heft has argued that the influence of environmental design precedes conscious awareness and information processing. Assuming Heft’s conjecture, this implies that—if informed by biologically influential signals (e.g., biophilic design)—the design of the ambient physical environment may positively ‘nudge’ human behavior in ways useful to sustainability and sensitivity to the environment—although relevant critical perspectives suggest that dynamic conditions and contextual complexity may modify the potential of nudge theory applications. Still, could it be that sustainable design can improve human health and well-being? Research suggests that environmentally responsible and biophilic design may accomplish at least a few elements of this goal and perhaps also enhance some aspects of cognitive performance. Could this approach support environmental sustainability by linking sustainable design to its potential economic benefits via worker productivity or student success? If so, then the strategy of improving positive well-being through design aligns well with the goal of maintaining the long-term viability of the earth’s ecosystem.
Highlights
Institutions, corporate leaders, and both national and international enterprises claim to embrace sustainability, sustainable design, green design, and saving the environment in general, fewer consistently reflect this dedication in practice [1]
A very important question for sustainable design focused on human well-being and quality of life concerns the level of conscious awareness associated with these various aspects of perceptual processing
Grounding environmental design within the topics of quality of life, health, and well-being ensures its place at the strategic table for sustainable design, preserving the planet, and protecting earth’s ecosystems—considered both locally and globally
Summary
Institutions, corporate leaders, and both national and international enterprises claim to embrace sustainability, sustainable design, green design, and saving the environment in general, fewer consistently reflect this dedication in practice [1]. Sustainability and ‘green design’, should reflect a consistent set of values that determine both current and future design principles and priorities. These principles should endeavor to achieve outcomes defined and measured by well-being and quality of life for earth’s denizens, along with associated economic benefits. Painting with a very broad brush, as we develop, our sensory experience of the world generates memories that operate like perceptual categories to classify future experience [7]. A very important question for sustainable design focused on human well-being and quality of life concerns the level of conscious awareness associated with these various aspects of perceptual processing.
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