Abstract

Healthy building design guides are cogent and necessary. While elements that contribute to healthy buildings are multifactorial, the perception of sound versus noise is subjective and difficult to operationalize. To inform the commissioning process, the acoustics in an open office was examined following the first international building certification system that focuses on the well-being of occupants. Results highlight the role facility managers play in ensuring acoustical quality and offer suggestions to optimize healthy building rating systems. Mixed empirical evidence concerning the advantages of open office designs exists, as does evidence that noise, and a lack of privacy, affects workers’ levels of distraction and dissatisfaction. Sound masking systems can lower stress levels and augment performance. However, the sound produced by these systems can also be disruptive; conflicting information exists for facility managers to use when making decisions. The results suggest that, although objective measurements and healthy building guidelines for designing satisfactory indoor acoustic environments are important, changes to the physical environment, and acoustical systems, in particular, require iterative subjective assessments within the retrofit process to bolster occupant satisfaction. Mixed-methodologies used in this study may aid facilities managers in capturing and interpreting occupant data about physical stimuli in the workplace and improving the commissioning process.

Highlights

  • Healthy buildings, designed to improve indoor environmental quality (IEQ), are becoming more popular for many cogent reasons [1,2]

  • This study aimed to explore the following two questions: 1. Do results of objective measures of sound, using the latest healthy building frameworks as a guide, coincide with users’ subjective perceptions of sound in an office space?

  • The step in making this line of inquiry more comprehensive is to center research efforts on using interdisciplinary methodologies to understand how occupants respond to operational solutions at a granular level so that facilities managers can better evaluate success for office modernization programs that include acoustical solutions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Healthy buildings, designed to improve indoor environmental quality (IEQ), are becoming more popular for many cogent reasons [1,2]. Conventional strategies include selecting sites for buildings or spaces that provide active transportation options, incorporating physical and operational upgrades that enhance indoor environmental qualities, providing access to healthy food options, and enforcing company-wide policies and facility services to improve employee’s mental well-being. Many of these strategies combine the latest scientific research to create a scorecard to help owners evaluate the current status and possible improvements. The step in making this line of inquiry more comprehensive is to center research efforts on using interdisciplinary methodologies to understand how occupants respond to operational solutions at a granular level so that facilities managers can better evaluate success for office modernization programs that include acoustical solutions

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call