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| IMAGING
Scientists can "see" animal brain activity using
noninvasive tools. (Photo courtesy of Salk Institute of
Biological Studies) |
In an effort to prove
beyond scientific doubt a relationship between design and
human health, well-being and worker productivity, the American
Institute of Architects is embarking on an historic path that
may result in a new discipline of science. Sources call it
"neuro-architecture."
AIA recently announced two unprecedented
research initiatives, one with the Salk Institute and the
other with the U.S. General Services Administration and the
National Institutes of Health. They are intended to show empirically
that different physical environments affect brain activity
and even change brain structure. The projects, though in their
infancy, could have a major impact on how the workplace, buildings
and even towns and cities are planned, designed and retrofitted,
say sources.
"I believe that good architecture
can increase your productivity, elevate your sense of well-being
and cause you to heal more quickly," said Norman L. Koonce,
Washington, D.C.-based AIA's executive vice president and
CEO. He spoke at the AIA 2003 National Convention and Expo
in San Diego, May 8-10. "I believe we can prove that
[good] architecture can [even] increase longevity," he
said.
Koonce thinks the "biggest
problem" will be getting interest in the research from
architects, some of whom might feel their creativity would
be stifled by the scientific method.
He doesn't have to convince the
San Diego AIA chapter. The legacy project for this year's
convention is the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture.
The academy touts itself as the first institution to explore
how humans perceive the built environment and how they respond
to it.
The fledgling nonprofit, which
has an advisory board of architects and scientists that reads
like a Who's Who in neuroscience, initially intends to study
office worker productivity, primary school learning and "healing
by design" for Alzheimer's patients. Experiments will
track human brain neuron firings in a noninvasive way.
Supporters want to prove the hypothesis
that "the environment, the structure we live in, affects
our brain and our brain affects our behavior," said Fred
H. Gage, professor at Laboratory of Genetics, Salk Institute
for Biological Studies, La Jolla, Calif. "It's time we
work together to collect the beginnings of the information,"
he said during a keynote speech at the convention, which drew
a record 20,000 attendees.
Gage and others are proposing a
merger of the disciplines of neuroscience and architecture.
"We need to impose empiricism on architecture,"
said Gage. That may be a challenge to the sensitivities of
the architect, he admitted.
Tests will involve stimulating
brain activity. Subjects can be humans, rather than mice or
rats, thanks to noninvasive tools such as magnetic resonance
imaging and other brain scanners.
Many see a day when architecture
as a clinical science is used to promote health and eliminate
disease. "This could be a whole new field of science,"
said John Eberhard, AIA's director of research planning and
the 2003 recipient of the AIA College of Fellows $100,000
Latrobe Fellowship, which he will use to gear up the academy.
The academy is in a fund-raising
mode and is laying groundwork for how information can be disseminated
and how neuro-architecture can be incorporated into architecture
school curriculums, said Alison Whitelaw, president of the
San Diego Architectural Foundation, a member of the academy's
board and a principal of Platt/Whitelaw Architects Inc., San
Diego.
AIA also is under a roughly $500,000
contract with GSA's Public Buildings Service to explore stress
and the workplace. "We're trying to quantify the relationship
between behavior, the built environment and organizational
performance...," said Kevin Kampschroer, research director
for PBS's WorkPlace 2020 program, which has a total
of 22 projects planned, and seven, including the AIA's, under
way. PBS is responsible for 340 million sq ft of office space,
of which half is leased, and a $2-billion-per-year capital
program for renovation, repair and new construction of government
buildings.
The GSA-AIA-NIH research will use
70 PBS employees, gathering data from each through 24-hour
periods. After baseline data is collected, researchers will
change workplace variables, such as lighting, heating, air
conditioning, color, noise, privacy levels, window proximity,
even walls, and give the subjects cognitive tasks to perform
under the different variables.
PBS will use two techniques to
measure stress. One is a small monitor, attached to a belt,
to measure variables in heart rate, which gives indication
of brain activity. The other is an arm patch that collects
drops of sweat that can be broken into 50 hormones, which
determine biological balance. In conjunction, subjects will
be given a personal digital assistant to input activities.
Measuring people's stress response
is "feasible and available this minute and has been applied
in other settings," says Esther Sternberg, a medical
doctor involved in the GSA-AIA research and director of the
Integrative Neural Immune Program at NIH, Bethesda, Md. "This
is not pie in the sky."
The study will not be done until
NIH gives the green light, hopefully in the next week, says
Eberhard. Results could come by year-end.
Sources say it will be at least
10 years before there is an understanding of the neurological
underpinnings of design. GSA's WorkPlace 2020 program
should be done in two to three years.
AIA reports it is getting its own
house back in order after a decline in financial health. First
quarter net income is $12.9 million, which is 2.6% ahead of
the budgeted goal, said Koonce. Total net assets hit $3.5
million in 2002, as projected (ENR 5/20/02 p. 12). By 2007,
AIA projects it will have almost $9 million in total net assets,
which is about what it had in 1997 when the decline began.
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