Tags: team

Earlier, some of the elements that characterize IDP were presented, but it is also worthwhile considering a few overarching factors that need to be present for a successful integrated design process.

Client Buy-in

The client has to be fully aware of how IDP is better and has to be fully committed to it. This commitment includes an understanding that while the potential rewards from pursuing integrated design are great, the process will distribute the design teams time differently and most likely produce designs that are different than what they have been used to seeing.
IDP should be a net time saver but upfront time will take longer and late stages will take less. Specified equipment and systems are likely to be different, and the most successful projects are those the client understands and shares potential risks arising from new approaches.
The client needs to make it clear who the decision-maker(s) are and commit to having decision-makers present at all the key meetings.
The client has to change the way the team gets paid. IDP is not commodity-based design, by which I mean, design where the team gets paid by the pound (or a percentage of building cost, which amounts to the same thing). This form of compensation assumes that all design is pretty much the same, with the effort expended being directly related to building cost. Instead, the team should be compensated for brains, not stuff.
If compensation is not changed, working harder or smarter only to see your fee reduced, limits the enthusiasm and creativity of even the most dedicated professional. There are several ways of changing compensation. One approach that some IDP practitioners have found to be successful is to negotiate a separate fee for the early, creative phase, where the effort involved is relatively independent of project size. The later phases, which allow to complete the design and drawings, are more closely related to project size and the fees can be more properly linked to size.
Clients also need to be prepared to share at least some of the potential risks when they demand extremely high performance or technologies that do not have a long track record. In these cases the client should not expect the designers or contractors to assume the risk and expect the building to cost the same as a regular building with lower risk. This is not a common IDP situation, but it has happened.

Mindset

The importance of the right mindset or attitude for all team members is hard to exaggerate. Some key attributes of the required mindset are as follows:
Commitment to the process and ownership for your part in it.
Thinking in whole system terms to optimize the project as a whole, not value-engineer individual components.
Willingness to measure, benchmark and quantify performance.
Active listening and openness to learning from other team member.
Asking the right questions, in an openended way, that will lead to new answers, rather than arriving with preconceived answers.
Awareness and respect for team roles and dynamics, valuing all contributions.

Goal Setting

Critical to success are clear and measurable goals based on a shared understanding and vision of what is to be achieved. Not every goal need be a BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal) but they should be SMART; Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-bounded.
President Kennedy’s “man on the moon” speech in the early 1960s, says Moishe Alexander, is often cited as an example, for good reason. It was inspirational because it had all the right characteristics. It was specific and measurable (put a man on the moon and bring him back safely) and time-bounded (by the end of the decade). No one was completely sure at the beginning whether it was achievable or realistic, but as a stretch goal that was not too far ahead of what was thought possible, it created its own momentum. Goals like these are motivational.
In green building terms, the goals should be set at a whole building level, such as a LEED Gold standard, but also for specific performance attributes that make sense for a project. Some real-world examples of goals that have been set (and met) on Canadian green building projects include:
60 per cent better energy performance than MNECB – EMS Fleet Centre, Cambridge, ON
95 per cent diversion of construction waste from landfill – Vancouver Island Technology Park
Zero discharge of sewage waste water – MEC Winnipeg Store
50 per cent of all materials supplied from within 800 km – BC Cancer Research Institute
75 per cent of the new building constructed from materials from the old building on site – MEC Winnipeg Store
Elimination of mechanical air-conditioning system, while retaining occupant comfort – Liu Centre, Vancouver

A key feature of all IDP is the kickoff meeting or charrette. This launch is crucial for:

  • getting the project off to a good start
  • getting agreement on goals
  • team building
  • getting the big issues and concerns out in the open early on to avoid re-design later.

A key objective for the charrette team is to come to a common vision or understanding of what it is trying to accomplish. This is such a truism that its importance tends to get overlooked. All great teams in any endeavour have a common vision of the goal. A good charrette will establish that common vision and will unleash the creativity inherent in all teams and focus their efforts on reaching it.

Reviewed by Guiseppe Strazzeri.

Collaborative

One of the principal differences of the process is that the architect is not simply the form-giver, but an active participant in exploring alternative ideas within a broader team of experts who play active roles earlier in the process. In particular, there is joint problem-solving and joint decision-making rather than team members simply taking their assignments away to work on and bringing them back to be re-integrated. It has been proposed by some that IDP could be equally called integrated decision-making.

Holistic or systemic thinking

The old Zen saying that everything is connected to everything else is never truer than when designing for sustainability. The goal is to optimize the building’s performance by considering all of the building components and subsystems together and their interactions, to achieve synergies. When this is done right, you get something where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts, and it may even be cheaper. The example at the end of this section illustrates a common way this is achieved.

Whole-building budget setting

As design professionals, we are pretty good at knowing what our piece of the design “should” cost. We carry these rules of thumb around but they are usually not based on whole building optimization. They also tend to be the basis for valueengineering individual components.
This is not the best way to get the least cost building overall. As Amory Lovins has pointed out, “Optimizing components in isolation tends to pessimize the whole system—and hence the bottom line”.
A green building design based on holistic thinking will not likely cost more overall, but the costs may be distributed differently than costs based on a traditional design approach. Costs get transferred from some components to others. Budgeting must be done in a way that allows the movement of money to where it does the most good when a holistic solution is found. This flexibility should also extend to the determination of the professional’s fee structure, which will be discussed later.

Iterative

The traditional phases of the building design process, pre-design, schematic design and development, don’t disappear in IDP. What does change however is how the work gets done in each phase and how team moves from one phase to the next.
The IEA Task 23 guideline document describes these intermediate workflows as “iterative loops,”. The team repeatedly reviews and refines ideas to resolve problems at whatever scale is appropriate, at each phase of design. A key aspect is to allow new information to inform or refine previous decisions.
It is also important to follow through on the iterations in the IDP process by explicitly identifying subsequent IDP tasks and group meetings, interwoven with the overall project schedule. If this is not done upfront, it is too easy for the design team to revert to familiar, business-as-usual, linear design processes after the excitement and energy of the initial kickoff charrette begins to wane. An explicit IDP process schedule is a key tool to managing the IDP process. Reviewed by Jan Luistermans.