Four years ago, at one of its technology gatherings, the engineering firm BuroHappold concluded that “we weren’t connected enough as a company,” recalls Craig Schwitter, PE, a Partner who has been with the firm since 1992 and leads its multidisciplinary projects.
To take advantage of available communications tools, Buro Happold formed its Computational Collective, which Schwitter says presents the firm’s employees with “a different way of thinking and working.”
Buro Happold's feedback loop
The Collective now has 400 members across all of the firm’s practices and offices. “It’s a way of democratizing technology, and all you have to do to be in the Collective is to contribute to it,” says Schwitter.
Where the Collective is about encouraging employees to interact, BuroHappold has also recently established a data exchange framework BHoM (for Buildings & Habitats object Model), which Schwitter says emerged from the Collective and allows for practical interfaces among teams. Last year, the firm unveiled its open-source website, BHoM.xyz.
BuroHappold has been moving in this collaborative direction for a while. One of its recent signature projects—the 1.4 million-sf retail and lifestyle complex at Jewel Changi Airport in Singapore, with its 131-foot-tall indoor rain vortex that pours from an oculus within a glass-domed roof—required the engagement of several of the firm’s offices, including New York, Boston, London, and Hong Kong. Schwitter agrees that this project could be viewed as a precursor to the Collective.
SEE ALSO: Clayco seeks the cutting edge as a competitive advantage
The ultimate goal of these changes, he says, is a process for tracking, measuring, and predicting human behavior for the purpose of designing and engineering better buildings. “How do you measure happiness, wellness? We see a future where we can measure the human experience. That’s like a light bulb going off for an engineer, and it’s a very motivating concept for me. But without data, we wouldn’t be able to even ask these questions.”
Innovations include digital twins for hospitals
Schwitter says BuroHappold is “very close” to being able to create digital twins for hospitals and other building types that incorporate human behavioral data. And one of Schwitter’s colleagues, Wolf Mangelsdorf, a Group Director and Partner with the firm, has formulated a “science of place” design strategy to multifamily housing, in what he calls “Wechselwirkungen.”
The intent is to reconcile design models and “interventions” that stem from community input with occupant and community needs, to create a continuous feedback loop that would define the criteria for deciding which design will works best.
Craig Schwitter, PE (at left), a Partner, says the Computational Collective has changed the way people within the firm communicate and work together. Photo: Buro Happold
Related Stories
Contractors | May 26, 2023
Enhanced use of data is crucial for improving construction job site safety
Executives with major construction companies say new digital tools are allowing them to use data more effectively to reduce serious safety incidents and improve job site safety.
AEC Tech Innovation | May 12, 2023
Meet Diverge, Hensel Phelps' new ConTech investment company
Thai Nguyen, Director of Innovation with Hensel Phelps, discusses the construction giant's new startup investment platform, Diverge.
Sustainability | May 1, 2023
Increased focus on sustainability is good for business and attracting employees
A recent study, 2023 State of Design & Make by software developer Autodesk, contains some interesting takeaways for the design and construction industry. Respondents to a survey of industry leaders from the architecture, engineering, construction, product design, manufacturing, and entertainment spheres strongly support the idea that improving their organization’s sustainability practices is good for business.
Design Innovation Report | Apr 27, 2023
BD+C's 2023 Design Innovation Report
Building Design+Construction’s Design Innovation Report presents projects, spaces, and initiatives—and the AEC professionals behind them—that push the boundaries of building design. This year, we feature four novel projects and one building science innovation.
AEC Tech Innovation | Apr 27, 2023
Does your firm use ChatGPT?
Is your firm having success utilizing ChatGPT (or other AI chat tools) on your building projects or as part of your business operations? If so, we want to hear from you.
Design Innovation Report | Apr 19, 2023
Reinforced concrete walls and fins stiffen and shade the National Bank of Kuwait skyscraper
When the National Bank of Kuwait first conceived its new headquarters more than a decade ago, it wanted to make a statement about passive design with a soaring tower that could withstand the extreme heat of Kuwait City, the country’s desert capital.
Design Innovation Report | Apr 19, 2023
HDR uses artificial intelligence tools to help design a vital health clinic in India
Architects from HDR worked pro bono with iKure, a technology-centric healthcare provider, to build a healthcare clinic in rural India.
Design Innovation Report | Apr 19, 2023
Meet The Hithe: A demountable building for transient startups
The Hithe, near London, is designed to be demountable and reusable. The 2,153-sf building provides 12 units of business incubator workspace for startups.
3D Printing | Apr 11, 2023
University of Michigan’s DART Laboratory unveils Shell Wall—a concrete wall that’s lightweight and freeform 3D printed
The University of Michigan’s DART Laboratory has unveiled a new product called Shell Wall—which the organization describes as the first lightweight, freeform 3D printed and structurally reinforced concrete wall. The innovative product leverages DART Laboratory’s research and development on the use of 3D-printing technology to build structures that require less concrete.
Smart Buildings | Apr 7, 2023
Carnegie Mellon University's research on advanced building sensors provokes heated controversy
A research project to test next-generation building sensors at Carnegie Mellon University provoked intense debate over the privacy implications of widespread deployment of the devices in a new 90,000-sf building. The light-switch-size devices, capable of measuring 12 types of data including motion and sound, were mounted in more than 300 locations throughout the building.