Awards: 2003 Young Architects Award
Recipient: Ronald Todd Ray, AIA (STUDIO27architecture)
Representative Work: GYMR Mediating Wall; Washington, D.C.
Client: GYMR (Garrett, Yu Hussein, McCabe & Reis, LLC
Photo: John K. Burke, AIA (STUDIO27architecture)
 

   
 
  AIA Home :: What is the 50 to 50 Tool?
 
 
 

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What is the 50 to 50 Tool?

 

50 to 50 is a product of the AIA Sustainability Discussion Group (SDiG) in response to the Institute's commitment to the 2030 Challenge. COTE asked SDiG to introduce the tool to COTE members.

50 to 50 is intended to be an informative and easily accessible reference to provide a basic understanding of the 50 initial strategies and tools available to help our membership get to 50 percent carbon reduction - the first step in the 2030 Challenge.  The assumption is that the list of 50 will continue to grow and to be refined as we discover new and better ways of reducing carbon and as the emissions reduction targets progress to greater percentage reductions over time. 

The current format was developed to provide basic information about the 50 topics, applications and emerging trends, and some links for more information.  Always intended to be searchable and interactive, the next step in the evolution of 50 to 50 will be to "repackage" it so that it can make this transition to become a web-based resource for users of all levels of sophistication. 

50 to 50 evolves from Frank Lloyd Wright's Tree of Life as a conceptual framework.  The base of the tree contains the foundation and "grounding" root structure. In it is the basis for 50 to 50: The COTE Ten Measures of Sustainable Design. From this the tree grows into three primary trunks: new buildings, existing buildings, and communities. These trunks spread into branches: Site, Skin, Structure, Space, System, and Support. These branches evolve into the leaves of the tree of life, the 50 principles. It is intended that from these leaves any number of "blossoms" would sprout: These would grow/change/modify over time, and vary project to project and region to region. These "blossoms" become specific sustainable strategies, techniques, and approaches that designers could apply to a specific design project.

The idea is that a designer could connect anywhere on the tree, at one of the COTE measures, or at one of the branches, or even on one of the leaves, given a broad topical area, or a specific design idea. Once a connection is made, several interconnected elements would be revealed or illuminated, establishing a dynamic interface, and linking opportunities holistically. This would allow for both individual or singular design investigation, as well as establishing "connections" for more integrated and holistic design inquiry. One could enter at either a broad conceptual level or a focused specific level and engage sustainable design thinking and exploration. 50 to 50 is intended to have both breadth and depth and ultimately become a key, dynamic "tool" for carbon reduction and zero energy design.

50 to 50 is presently a good encyclopedia of principles, and we are now working toward evolving these principles into more tools, techniques, and strategies, and would like this to become web-based and interactive.