The most recognized sustainable building initiative is the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, a certification that evaluates the potential environmental performance of a building over its life cycle. However, research has found that LEED-certified projects incur higher OSHA-recordable injury rates than conventional construction projects due to widely used design elements and construction practices employed to attain LEED certification.
When it comes to sustainable buildings, the construction industry’s current perspective has focused on resource efficiency in terms of positive environmental impact, reduction of utility costs and the health of its final occupants.
The articles’ authors, Mohammed Albattah, Marielle Roucheray and Matthew Hallowell, Ph.D., state that sustainability should incorporate the effects of a building throughout its entire life cycle. This includes the health and safety of workers on the construction site.
Prevention through design is a deliberate consideration of construction worker safety and health in the design of a building, by removing safety during design by altering a building’s features so they are safer to construct and maintain. Studies have shown that PTD can be particularly effective in the construction of sustainable buildings.
In advocating for prevention through design in sustainable buildings, the article describes recent research identifying specific exposures to hazards connected to sustainable building components, the magnitudes of their impacts and the methods of risk mitigation, a web-based tool that organizes PTD information into a single decision support system and the results of pilot testing this tool on active projects with experienced professionals.
For more information, visit http://www.asse.org/professionalsafety.
SOURCE: American Society of Safety Engineers