A call to action
This is a call to action for C-suites to be transparent in their intentions with
investors and designers in reshaping the built environment sector. If C-suites,
investors and designers align on environmental, social and governance (ESG)
objectives, then they are more likely to realize mutual success in the future.
ESG alignment focuses on transparency of intentions to benefit all
stakeholders — including shareholders who are interested in knowing that all
measures have been taken to mitigate their investment risk; or increasingly, to
capture new social, environmental or economic opportunities arising from
changing global expectations. We refer to this intentional alignment as “the
multi-stakeholder lens.”
Investment funds often remind us that past performance is no guarantee of future
results. And “forward-looking statements” are not yet factual and intentional at
best. This is similarly true in the design community. Design solutions are based
on a future pro forma that has yet to be realized over a project horizon. In
both investment and design, simply returning profits to investors is no longer a
good enough measure of success. If any stakeholder does not see benefits in the
design of a capital project, then gaining support is unlikely.
A call for a multi-stakeholder lens
ESG criteria define broader parameters for investment risk and design
performance. The objectives and outcomes of investment and design are
increasingly being held to a higher level of expectations that benefit all
stakeholders. Thus, a multi-stakeholder lens focuses on the benefit not only to
shareholders as investors; but also to customers, employees, suppliers and
communities, to name just a few.
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Ultimately, the integration of a stakeholder lens also has the potential to
benefit shareholders — in part, by mitigating risk. Enterprises are increasingly
under public scrutiny for the business activities of their entire supply chains
and lifecycles of their products and services. This end-to-end accountability
underlies, for example, the Extended Producer Responsibility
laws
currently taking hold in the European Union.
As noted above, applying a multi-stakeholder lens to the built environment
requires a laser focus on intent. The intentions of investment and design must
be aligned. Two recent declarations in the business and design communities, in
particular, proclaimed their commitments to this alignment — and ultimately, to
the greater common good.
-
In 2017, the Montreal Design
Declaration defined design
as “the application of intent: the process through which we create the
material, spatial, visual and experiential environments in a world made ever
more malleable by advances in technology and materials, and increasingly
vulnerable to the effects of unleashed global development.” Over 700
professional associations, design schools and stakeholders signed the
declaration in the presence of UN agencies. The declaration concludes
that "All people deserve to live in a well-designed world.”
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In 2019, the Business Roundtable revised its Statement on the Purpose
of a
Corporation
— declaring that “companies should serve not only their shareholders, but
also deliver value to their customers, invest in employees, deal fairly with
suppliers and support the communities in which they operate.” This captured
a new vision of intent for corporations, looking beyond the dominant view
of the past 50
years
that defined a corporation’s primary purpose as maximization of shareholder
return. The new declaration was signed by 181 CEOs of major corporations —
presumably by many of your organizations, or the clients of designers.
Taken together, especially when considered alongside evolving societal
expectations of companies with regard to ESG, these two declarations will
forever change investing and designing. Sustainable value creation now involves
a much broader range of interests to be addressed by stakeholder
capitalism
– a view that business should deliver for all stakeholders, from their
employees, to suppliers, to the planet.
To that end, we see a pivot in how we define the objectives of design and
investment in the built environment: from what we are designing, to for
whom we are designing.
A shifting paradigm for design in an evolving investment landscape
Changing the main objective from “what” to “for whom” poses new, fundamental
questions about what successful design in the built environment in an era of
stakeholder capitalism looks like, and highlights the promise of design in
shaping a more sustainable and equitable world.
Despite a growing awareness and increased calls for a multi-stakeholder lens,
this shift isn’t easy; it requires that we fundamentally rethink what we do and
how we do it. The path to true multi-stakeholder capitalism isn’t paved with
pledges for net zero by
2030,
nor incremental tweaks and changes to policies and practices.
Design — or indeed, design thinking — holds great promise in fundamentally
reshaping the systems and organizations that must play a role in delivering a
more inclusive economy and
society.
In the built environment, this means reflecting on the entire value chain — from
the materials we
purchase,
to the spaces we
inhabit,
to the interplay with our communities — in order to make choices that benefit
the broader system of stakeholders over the long term. From circular design
perspectives,
this means eliminating (not merely reducing) waste; keeping materials in use
longer by upcycling, rather than recycling; and restoring natural ecosystems and
ecosystem services of cleaning water, purifying air, and sequestering carbon and
other nutrients in soils.
As an executive collaborating with a design team, you play a critical role in
the journey of building a sustainable brand in the eyes of your shareholders,
customers, employees, suppliers and communities. The health and wellness of
today’s population and future generations depend on the health of our planet.
Stakeholders expect companies to account for what was once conveniently called
“externalities” — ranging from carbon, waste and pollution resulting from all
scopes of business activities, to post-consumer end of life for products and
services.
Below, we share a few ways to begin the pivot and ask, “How can we design
better for a broader range of stakeholders?”
Designing to restore the planet
We consider both the planet and future generations to be critical stakeholders.
Globally, the built environment generates 30 percent of total greenhouse gas
emissions; construction uses 32 percent of the world's natural resources. What’s
more, 40 percent of solid waste within landfills is attributable to construction
and demolition activities. We’ve written extensively about how the synergy of
decarbonization, regeneration and circularity in the built
environment presents
significant opportunities for brands to boost their own sustainability
commitments.
A few specific examples of how companies can work with investors and designers
to restore the planet for future generations include:
Many of these strategies are identified in Cuningham’s online tool, “An
Interactive Tool for Circular Economy Strategies in the Built
Environment,” which we will
elaborate upon later in this series of articles. In total, these sustainability
strategies can be used to create value for various stakeholders while building a
foundation for, or strengthening, a broader ESG
strategy.
Shareholders
More than ever, shareholders must now consider material risks to business
continuity. Such risks may include the full range of ESG concerns including
climate risk, community impact, discrimination, harassment, board representation
and workforce
bias.
Proactive practices that mitigate these risks by considering all stakeholders
can increase investor confidence. How these concerns are considered in the built
environment expresses brand values and behaviors in tangible ways including:
-
Business continuity
-
Climate risk
-
Natural habitat conservation
-
Fair labor practices
-
Environmental Product Declarations (EDP)
-
Health Product Declarations (HPD)
-
Waste management
Customers and consumers
Consumers are increasingly willing to “vote with their feet” on ESG issues that
are important to them. The built environment is no exception. Especially in the
multi-family sector, people are starting to demand sustainability as they
evaluate which apartment communities best suit their values in terms of how they
were developed and how they are managed. The sense of home and how we use our
space at home is also evolving, precipitated in large part by the pandemic.
Beyond this, design is also emerging as an important enabler of service delivery
and consumer experience, for example, in health
settings.
Example concerns in the minds of customers and consumers may include:
-
Environmental quality
-
Financial affordability
-
Amenities and convenience
-
Engagement with surrounding community
-
Sustainably sourced materials
Employees
An adage held that people spend a third of their lives “at work.” But what we
mean by “at work” is no longer that clear. In a world of remote and hybrid work,
alongside an emerging future of work marked by changing skills and shifting
generational priorities, the responsibility of brands to forge connection and
care for employees will continue to become more complex. Here, too, design plays
a critical role in building physical and digital spaces that bring people
together. A few examples include:
-
Designing the employee workplace experience to reflect brand values
-
Fostering diversity, equity and inclusion in employee engagement, talent
retention and attraction
-
Minimizing workplace stressors, such as daily commutes, that may adversely
affect employee health and wellbeing
-
Providing flexible work arrangements allowing employees to integrate their
work life and personal life
-
Providing collaborative spaces and tools to maintain social cohesion
Community
Community includes not only the area and the people who live around your
offices, but also those cities, towns and villages in which materials are
harvested and manufactured, stored and transported, or ultimately disposed. We
need to design “beyond the property line” of the project. In addition, the
construction industry is considered a major factor in expanding social and
economic mobility among diverse populations and communities. To design for
communities requires acting locally and globally, while considering circularity
and equity across the entire value chain. A few examples of how we can design to
benefit communities include:
-
Vernacular design, which focuses on the use of local materials
-
Supply chain and circularity, to reduce waste and pollution in local
communities
-
Human rights and blockchain, to ensure transparency in ethical sourcing
-
Job creation, including in underserved communities
-
Community Benefit Agreements
-
Community health and wellbeing
-
Local and regional workforce participation
Suppliers
Research from Oxford
Economics
predicts that, despite the sharp downturn in construction activity due to the
coronavirus pandemic, the industry is poised for a 35 percent increase in output
to reach $5.8 trillion in 2030 — a slightly faster growth rate than the overall
economy. Design can play a role in supporting equitable access to this growing
market by:
-
Using procurement as a social impact strategy — for example, by specifying
living
wages
-
Driving opportunity for diverse, local and regional suppliers to be included
in projects
-
Working toward transparency and accountability across Scope 1, 2 and 3
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions
-
Emphasizing embodied and operational carbon in off-site manufacturing,
transportation to site, onsite construction, and post-occupancy facility
management
-
Evolving supply chains from least-cost awards to greater value cycles with
strategically aligned business partners
Steps you can take to ready your organization
We believe organizations that adopt a multi-stakeholder lens for their built
environment projects will become the leading sustainable brands in this decade
of action through 2030. To start, you should ask the company for which you are
designing: Which design choices will address their needs and contribute to our
broader ESG goals and targets, and how can we best share our commitments and
progress against these? We call this the cycle of assess, integrate and
communicate.
A few tactical steps you can take include:
Assess
-
Engage with your most critical stakeholders to understand their expectations
and what this means for your most material ESG
issues
to integrate into your strategies and reporting efforts
-
Build internal capabilities to stay laser-focused on emerging trends and
opportunities in ESG and design and to get ahead of the curve; many
organizations are implementing AI-based tools
Integrate
-
Align functional strategies and tactics of corporate real estate and
facilities with public and investor relations in declarations of enterprise
sustainability goals
-
Identify suppliers, builders and contractors willing to share risk and
reward in achieving your sustainability commitments with performance-based
service contracts
-
Seek financial lenders with high sustainability ratings for their investment
and loan practices (e.g., projects with least negative impacts on
biodiversity)
Communicate
-
Adopt recognized frameworks and
standards
for sustainability reporting to achieve fact-based ratings
-
Integrate annual reports to include both financial and sustainability
metrics, especially those driven by plant and fleet operations
Now is not the time to stand still. By understanding this multi-stakeholder
lens, shifting decision-making from “what” to “for whom,” and integrating this
perspective across your organization, you can help your company navigate the
rapidly evolving ESG landscape while contributing to a more sustainable and
inclusively designed future for all stakeholders.
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Published Oct 20, 2021 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST