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Is Soft Landings finally taking off?

10/10/2017

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It is mandatory!

The Soft Landings initiative started nearly 14 years ago with the aim of avoiding giving occupants and operators an uncomfortable experience when the building is first handed over. It is now gaining traction because Government Soft Landings (GSL) was mandated on all Government projects from 2016.

Closing the gap

A smooth transition from design to operation means that the building can be fine-tuned to run in the way they were intended. Continued support from designers and constructors after completion helps to iron out the bumps and early involvement of the occupants and operators in the design process helps to ensure that there is no gap between expectations and reality.

It’s really difficult to get buildings to work properly, without this attention, as all buildings are prototypes and can only be tested when they are occupied.

Dave Cheshire - Regional Director, Sustainability, AECOM

Reaping the benefits

The benefits are: clear visibility on the likely performance of the building from the start of the project; reduced operating costs, carbon emissions and water use; fewer complaints from occupants (and operators!) relating to comfort conditions; no need to resort to defects liability claims to fix problems; demonstrable performance outcomes that are invaluable when justifying public sector building projects.

Feedback loop

Designers and constructors get very little feedback on whether their buildings work as intended, which means that there is the real risk that the same mistakes are repeated. Analysis and a proactive approach to lessons learned is an inherent part of GSL and helps to close the loop and allow designs to evolve with each iteration. It is remarkable how rarely anyone asks ‘what went wrong on the last project you did?’ The resulting answers have proved invaluable.

Up and running

Implementation of the Government Soft Landings is underway on 10 South Colonnade – one of the new Hubs buildings as part of the consolidation of the Government estate - and our team is currently running several other Soft Landings projects for a variety of clients.

As active members of the Building Services Research and Information Association (BSRIA) Soft Landings User Group, we were involved from the very inception of soft landings; contributing to documents such as Procuring for Soft Landings and writing CIBSE guidance on evaluating operational energy performance at the design stage, that is a crucial element of the process.

It’s never too early

Government Soft Landings starts at the inception of the project with the aim of ensuring that the interests of those who will use the asset are aligned with those who are delivering it. GSL advocates a collaborative approach that involves the whole supply chain including designers, constructors, operators and the occupants.

At RIBA Stage 1 GSL requires that outcome-based targets are set and agreed in relation to both social, economic and environmental performance. This relates to energy, water and waste operating costs and environmental performance along with social targets for the health and wellbeing of occupants.

The end is the beginning

By involving the building designers in the first two years of operation, it helps to fine tune the building performance and to optimise crucial elements such as the lighting controls and ventilation systems. This will assist in the reduction of carbon emissions and energy use and to ensure the health, wellbeing and comfort of the occupants. This approach was taken at UEL library.

In addition to building a design stage energy model to better evaluate the operational performance at the design stage, we re-ran the model after handover using the actual operating regimes.

Dave Cheshire - Regional Director, Sustainability, AECOM

This aided our analysis and reporting of energy use breakdowns for lighting, heating, cooling, etc. enabling us to provide resolutions as required (an example of the energy breakdown and ranges that can be gained from CIBSE TM54 energy modelling is shown in figure 1).

A concluding consideration is to use Virtual Prototyping to allow occupants to experience the space and provide aftercare to ensure that buildings are performing to their design intent.

What’s next?

All Government projects are required to implement Government Soft Landings, so there is a great opportunity to learn the lessons from each project and improve outcomes on every project. Fundamentally, Government Soft Landings is about being able to deliver on our promises, save resources and money and save occupants being the crash-test dummy for our buildings.

Perfect Circle is a joint venture formed by Pick Everard, Gleeds and AECOM, set up to realise value and opportunity for public authorities, SCAPE and communities across the UK. Perfect Circle leads the Built Environment Consultancy Services framework.

Dave Cheshire

Written by:

Dave Cheshire
Regional Director, Sustainability, AECOM