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Sustainable Design
We embrace our responsibility to the environment.
The economic use of natural resources is as important as program, comfort, form, and beauty. In good buildings, these elements are intelligently balanced. As technology improves and energy becomes more valuable, new strategies are emerging for controlling energy use. We build at the highest industry standards for green design, looking beyond certification, anticipating future trends in sustainability.

Sustainable design and socially responsible design go hand-in-hand.
We are proud of our 40-year commitment to sustainability. We specify materials and processes that are good for people and the planet. We value the human experience! The built environment must reinforce well-being. Daylight, view, air quality, and thermal comfort are the foundations of our design.

A building is a significant investment in energy.
We maximize savings by minimizing the energy profile of each site. We design with an eye towards total energy consumption, from construction through operation. The total energy consumed by a building is the sum of the energy used in its operation (latent energy) and the energy required to make the building (embodied energy) — including the harvesting and shipping of natural resources, manufacturing, transportation, and disposal of materials. Designing sustainably means finding an efficient balance between embodied and latent energy, understanding that latent energy has a far greater impact over time.

Energy efficiency has informed our design since our earliest days.
We were working towards "net-zero energy" before it was widely understood as a sustainable concept. As leaders in design for latent efficiencies, we built early examples of passive solar in 1973 and geothermal in 1978. Our continuing operation of the Rhode Island hydroelectric plant that we built in 1981 offsets three times our office building's annual carbon footprint. Bruner/Cott pioneered the adaptive reuse of existing buildings, recognizing reuse as a strategy for recapturing a building's embodied energy along with its historic value, and introducing new systems to create contemporary, energy-efficient buildings. Today, we are recognized for integrating green technologies into both new and historic buildings.

Efficiencies are gained at each stage of design and construction.
Understanding building science and integrated design are the first steps towards low-energy buildings. Latent energy is managed by carefully considering building placement, controlling fenestration, and detailing well-insulated, airtight wall assemblies. Energy modeling helps us to offset the remaining loads with new technology and efficient, innovative mechanical systems. We select materials with low embodied energy costs, and recognize value in the embodied energy of an existing structure.

Modeling efficiency and measuring results sharpens our design.
Our design teams set goals for annual energy consumption relative to building type and climate, use energy models to track goals as buildings develop, and follow through with metering that gives evidence for real performance. We field-test building envelopes to show builders where they can improve. We work with builders to divert construction waste from landfill. With little cost premium, our buildings achieve aggressive results: 75% energy reductions, 60% water use reductions, and 99% construction waste recycling — all beyond "business as usual."

Goals can be achieved with standard technology and without cost premiums.
Recognizing that building owners have different levels of resources available, we work to find low-cost sustainable design options. Investment in a more efficient building envelope allows for a smaller mechanical system, reducing initial and operation costs. Thanks to the success of LEED and other certification programs, many products and materials that were once available only at a premium are now industry standard. Five out of six principals at Bruner/Cott are LEED certified. All of Bruner/Cott's buildings are designed with LEED standards in mind; most are registered for LEED certification. 75% of those certified are at the highest levels of gold and platinum.

New opportunities continue to emerge.
Net-zero energy buildings are now a reality. The 2030 Challenge urges us all to incrementally reduce the carbon footprint of our buildings to zero. The first step is to design intelligent buildings that simply use less, decreasing the load for on-site renewable energy, and preparing for the smart electrical grids of the near future. Learning, inventing, and making beautiful new places, Bruner/Cott builds on a 40-year commitment to sustainable design.

The 2030 Challenge >
LEED Certification
2012 est
Seattle Pacific University / New Hall LEED Silver *
Landmark Center / Landmark North LEED Silver *
Lesley University / AIB Arts Campus LEED guidelines
University of Maine, Orono / New Media & Visual Arts Complex LEED *
2011 est
Boston University / East Campus Student Center LEED Gold *
MIT / Arthur D. Little Building E-60 LEED Silver *
Dartmouth College / Thayer Dining Hall LEED guidelines
Peddocks Island Historic Preservation MA Sustainable Design guidelines
2010
Hamilton College / Emerson Hall LEED Gold *
MIT / Sloan School of Management LEED Gold *
Muhlenberg College / Seegers Student Union Renovation LEED *
2009
Macalester College / Institute for Global Citizenship LEED Platinum
Lesley University / New Residence Halls LEED Gold guidelines
Bethel University / Brushaber Commons LEED guidelines
2008
University of Maine / Wells Commons LEED Silver
2007
Vanderbilt University / Commons Center LEED Gold
Dartmouth College / Kemeny Hall and Haldeman Center LEED Silver
2006
Harvard University / Blackstone Office LEED Platinum
Dartmouth College / McLaughlin Cluster Residence Halls LEED Gold
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study / Radcliffe Gymnasium LEED guidelines
2002
Mount Auburn Cemetery / Sawin Street LEED guidelines
  (* LEED pending)
The LEED Platinum-certified Institute for Global Citizenship at Macalester College
Bioswale at Harvard's Blackstone Offices
Since 1981 our hydroelectric plant at Blackstone Falls has offset three times the annual carbon footprint of our entire office building.
In-floor radiant heating system (infrared photograph)