Environmental Design
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Environmental design refers to taking environmental concerns into consideration when designing plans, programs, policies, buildings, or products. Environmental Design has been defined this way: "We live in the world by design. Creating the everyday environment in which we live involves complex systems of cultural meaning, visual communication and the use of tools, technology and materials. As a field of study, Environmental Design encompasses the built, natural, and human environments and focuses on fashioning physical and social interventions informed by human behaviour and environmental processes. Design asks us to find answers to the most fundamental of human questions: how should we live in the world and what should inform our actions? This complex endeavour requires an interdisciplinary approach."
"Environmental design" in the old-fashioned sense has to do with developing physical, spatial environments, whether interior or exterior, to meet one or more esthetic or day-to-day functional needs, or to create a specific sort of experience - the focus being the human-designed environment. As this is a field with a very lengthy history, it can be said to include such specialties as architects, acoustical scientists, landscape architects, urban planning, interior designers, lighting designers, and exhibit designers. In many communities and situations, historic preservation can be added to this list. Another recent addition to this general area might be "disability access" for all manner of construction projects.
From the middle of the twentieth century if not before, thinkers like Buckminster Fuller have acted as catalysts for a broadening and deepening of the concerns of environmental designers. Nowadays, energy-efficiency, appropriate technology, organic horticulture or organic agriculture, land restoration, community design, and ecologically sustainable energy and waste systems are recognized considerations or options and may each find application. Examples of the environmental design process include use of roadway noise computer models in design of noise barriers and use of roadway air dispersion models in analyzing and designing urban highways. Designers consciously working within this more recent framework of philosophy and practice seek a blending of nature and technology, regarding ecology as the basis for design. Some believe that strategies of conservation, stewardship, and regeneration can be applied at all levels of scale from the individual building to the community, with benefit to the human individual and local and planetary ecosystems.
In terms of its larger scope, environmental design obviously has implications for the industrial design of many sorts of products — innovative automobiles, wind-electricity generators, solar-electric equipment, and very many other kinds of equipment could serve as examples.
Environmental designers in this newer sense may be architects, engineers, environmental scientists, landscape designers, urban planners, waste-management experts, and so on.
See also
Crime Prevention Through Environmental DesignEnergy-efficient Buildings & Design:
- J. Baldwin
- Tom Bender
- Peter Calthorpe
- William McDonough
- Victor Papanek
- Sim Van der Ryn
- James Wines
- Ken Yeang
- Eastgate Centre, Harare
- Portcullis House
Waste Treatment Innovation:
Urban Ecology
Land Use
External links
- [Faculty of Environmental Design, University of Calgary]
- [Resources on the built environment]
- [R2000 House]
- [Environmental Design Research Association]
- [iNSnet Portal site for sustainable development]
- [Solar power, electric vehicle design, inflatable structures]
- [SustainabilityStart Links and database on sustainable development]
- [Center for Vernacular Architecture, Bangalore, India]
- [Green Progress Green building and sustainable development news]
See also
- Environmental_psychology
- Psychology
- Social sciences
- Behavioural sciences
- Ergonomics
- Human factors
- Ecology
- Design
- Environmental science
- Natural Environment
- Building engineering
- Urban design
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