Committee on the Environment

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Celebrating Earth Day: A Look into The Legacy of the AIA COTE and the COTE Top Ten Awards

  

Our favorite day of the year is here: Earth Day. AIA COTE Top Ten winners have historically been announced on this day, however this year, they will be announced with the design awards at the AIA Conference in June. Instead, on this important day of awareness for environmental protection, we celebrate the impact and legacy of the AIA COTE Top Ten award.

How it All Began

The Committee on the Environment (COTE) began when a Critical Planet Rescue (CPR) measure was presented by AIA Kansas City leaders, including Bob Berkebile and Kirk Gastinger, at the 1989 AIA convention in St. Louis. The measure called for the AIA to take action to address environmental concerns. Following this success, the leadership of COTE wanted to change the way the profession viewed design excellence. For the next 6-years, they worked to integrate performance standards into the criteria for the AIA national design awards. In an era marked by intense formalism, this was met with resistance. It was Gail Lindsey, FAIA who conceived the idea that COTE needed its own awards as a mechanism for agency. In 1997, the COTE Top Ten was born.[i] Initially called “Earth Day Top Ten,” the pilot program demonstrated that beauty and performance were not mutually exclusive.[ii]

The success of Lindsey’s vision and the group’s hard-won efforts were solidified when the COTE Top Ten Measures and Toolkit became the AIA’s “Framework for Design Excellence” and a requirement for national design awards in 2019. Now, the COTE Top Ten Award is fully incorporated into the AIA design awards program as one of the highest honors of design excellence. The Top Ten not only celebrates great design but continues to shape education, discourse, and design excellence while transforming the practice of architecture. In the spirit of self-reflection, below are some key impacts of the COTE Top Ten:

Redefining Design Excellence

Widespread adoption of the Framework for Design Excellence as well as the integration of metrics as criteria for design awards demonstrates how the AIA COTE Top Ten has shifted the conversation around sustainable design  It is no longer seen as an add on but a key indicator of design excellence.

Increasing Engagement in Energy Reporting

Since the Framework’s adoption, the number of AIA 2030 signatories has significantly grown from 682 signatories in 2018 to over 1,300 today. This is the largest increase since the program’s inception and one indicator that more firms are engaged with sustainable practices.

Pushing the Leading Edge of Sustainability

The COTE Top Ten Award is peer-reviewed by a technical panel with subject-matter experts that look at actual data versus predicted data using the Super Spreadsheet. Every year, COTE evaluates expanded criteria to be included in the Super Spreadsheet as part of the award submission in order to drive change. One recent example is the addition of the social cost of carbon, which makes visible the long-term damage done by carbon emissions to help architects make smarter choices.

Educating Students

With the launch of AIA Top Ten for Students [LF1] in 2015, in partnership with ACSA, future architects are being encouraged to take an integrated approach to design that protects and enhances the environment.[i]  Today, 74 schools in 45 states  participate in this student competition from across the country and engagement continues to grow with more than 5,000 students participating.

Resources and Tools

The Top Ten award demands rigor and clarity. This simple fact has generated resources and tools to support the needs of architects across project types in service of design excellence. These include:

Framework for Design Excellence

COTE Super Spreadsheet[KJ2] [JR3] 

Common App

COTE Top Ten Design Datamap

Growth of an Archive

Architectural archives preserve and provide evidence at the same time they tell us something about the discipline and practices of architecture. The online archive of Top Ten award winners is a powerful reference and generative tool that helps offices build upon the work of industry leaders.

Expanded Knowledge Base

The lessons learned from the analysis of COTE Top Ten winning projects contribute to the collective knowledge base of the profession. From conceptual to practical information, this knowledge is disseminated widely through presentations, publications, and the activities COTE network. The following continue to inform and enlighten:

Lessons from the Leading Edge

Habits of High-Performance Firms

Influence on Policy and Regulation

Many recognized projects influenced policy and regulation related to sustainable building practices. By showcasing successful examples, the award has had agency in shaping building codes, zoning ordinances, and other regulations to promote a zero-carbon, equitable, resilient, and healthy built environment.

“Regardless of when they are announced and how they are celebrated,” COTE Chair Michelle Amt, FAIA notes, the AIA COTE Top Ten Award is “fundamental to COTE’s mission.”[ii] As we look back on this Earth Day, it is clear from the examples above that the legacy of the AIA's COTE Top Ten Award extends far beyond accolades. Yet, it is from the successes of our past that we draw a renewed commitment to reorienting architecture towards the demands of climate action and climate justice. Happy Earth Day!


link to 2024 program [LF1]

Updated link to point to COTE Top Ten Web page, https://www.aia.org/design-excellence/awards/cote-top-ten-awards - where we host the Super spreadsheet.  This will alleviate "old" versions of the spreadsheet floating around in the future:)  [KJ2]

 [JR3]The only issue I see with that is you have to know where to find it on the webpage and it is way down at the bottom. Do what you want, but I still think it is better to link directly to the spreadsheet so you don’t have to go looking for it.

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