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Innocent Gininda shares his journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng), emphasizing the importance of mentorship, early preparation, and understanding ECSA requirements. He offers advice to aspiring PrEngs, highlighting the value of diverse feedback and a positive mindset. My journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng) culminated successfully in November 2024. I was fortunate to begin my career at a company with a Commitment and Undertaking (C&U) Agreement with ECSA and a robust mentorship program. This commitment to training engineers to the standard required for Professional Registration provided me with essential resources and a structured path to track my experience against ECSA requirements. Early exposure to these expectations instilled a positive outlook on registration and solidified my desire to achieve this milestone. My views on Professional Registration have remained consistently positive throughout this journey. Working alongside ...

Work is on the brink of a revolution – we need office buildings to match

Smart facilities in buildings are currently poorly coordinated, developers need uniform standards to fully implement innovative construction methods.

Picture this: It’s a Sunday, sometime in the not-too-distant future, and you’ve just walked into a mostly empty office building. You’re there to attend a meeting – one of the few times per week you actually have to go to the office any more, since so much of your work is done at home now. The moment you enter the dimly lit reception, the lights go up; you cross the open office floor, and then ascend a sweeping wooden staircase, saying hello to a few stray colleagues sprawled on the steps drinking coffee. Having scheduled your meeting in advance, the conference room is already prepped for your arrival, freshly cleaned, and the air set to the perfect temperature. Once the meeting is over, you stop at an unoccupied desk, fire off a couple of emails, and in minutes you’re back in light traffic on weekend streets, headed home.

None of this, of course, is so difficult to imagine. And that’s the point: heat and motion sensors; automated mechanical features; cloud-based data aggregation, readily accessible via easy-to-use digital platforms – as we approach the quarter-century, all of the ingredients for a more energy-efficient, humane and healthier work environment are already in place. The technology is there, the expertise is there, and with the advent of COVID, safer and more flexible working patterns are coming into play as well. Conditions seem ripe for a paradigm shift in how our office buildings are designed and managed.

The only problem? These new patterns, along with the tools that allow us to maximize the new office’s potential, have yet to be fully and consistently integrated. From the materials we build with, to the leases we sign, to the day-to-day minutiae of operation, a whole new way of doing business is at hand – but the building-development industry is held in check, stymied by an array of factors. Fortunately, these challenges can be overcome if only we meet them squarely.

The imperative to do so could hardly be clearer. Even before the current pandemic, it was obvious that we had to rethink the way we build and work. With the European Union poring over its ambitious Green Deal – and with the possibility that the United States could adopt a comparable programme in the near future – pressure has been mounting on industries of all kinds to take action on climate change. Buildings and the building trades have long been a major part of the world’s carbon problem, accounting for 39% of global emissions according to the United Nations Environment Programme. At the same time, the buildings market also represents low-hanging fruit, a highly controlled, closed-system economy where inputs and outputs can be measured and adjusted with relative ease. Already, great strides have been made in the field: Zero-waste work sites are fast becoming the norm, while material makers, architects and municipal governments are racing to meet the World Green Building Council’s goal of total carbon neutrality by 2050.

What’s holding them back is a lack of coordination – as well as a pervasive misunderstanding on the part of end users about what today’s smart buildings can do.

As regards the former: While developers and operators are well aware that the internet of things is coming to buildings, its implications for efficient management are still going unrecognized. The myriad suppliers whose work goes into any office building – the elevator manufacturers, lighting companies and heating, ventilation and air-conditioning firms – all are adding digital features to their products; and yet the products are not adequately connected, either to one another or to a central command module. In several recent and ongoing office projects from my firm, we deployed a new platform we call EDGE Next, an office-wide digital system that allows both workers and facilities teams to access information on almost every aspect of building performance.
How green building will contribute to achieving the SDGs
How green building will contribute to achieving the SDGs
Image: WGBC
Failure to coordinate within buildings is paralleled by a broader failure to coordinate between builders, and between different building cultures. The lack of uniform standards among developers, among nations, even among cities in the same nation, makes it necessary to reinvent the wheel over and over, both in the construction process and afterwards. To consider one example, new structural applications for wood, including in high-rise buildings, have proven it to be a safe and sustainable alternative to steel, with the added benefit of enhanced carbon capture. But in too many markets, neither the regulatory regime nor local trades organizations have kept pace with material science, making it practically and often legally impossible to create large-scale wooden office buildings. As in construction, so in management: If both bureaucracies and business leaders would adhere to general performance guidelines, networked digital platforms could make it possible, not just for individual businesses, but for entire business districts to reach optimal efficiency.

Finally, there is the problem of perception. In large measure, the reason for our overall lack of coordination is due to misplaced fears about the economic costs of greener, cleaner offices. In New Jersey in 2018, our company completed a new headquarters for Unilever. To overcome anxiety about prohibitive cost, we devised a financially backed performance guarantee – and then we beat that guarantee, bringing operating expenses to a previously unimaginable low. Through similar contractual incentives, as well as through intelligent tax and subsidy schemes, we can change the maths behind smart buildings, and with it the minds of the public.

Because in the end, this isn’t just about office buildings. Yes, the office of the future will be less crowded; it will have fewer assigned desks, fewer vertical floors, more staircases doubling as social spaces; the people who work there will have shorter commutes and commute less frequently, signing up for meetings from home; and their schedules will be instantly posted to the building network, allowing the cleaners to finish up, and the climate control to kick in exactly on time.

Also read: Is the pandemic an opportunity for cities to be more energy efficient?

But what all this truly points to is the next frontier for smart buildings: the home. If we in the development community can show what’s possible in the workplace, we will have taken one giant step towards persuading people everywhere to expect more from their living places, to demand houses that are healthy for them and healthy for the environment. That is the transformation we ultimately must see, and that is where all our efforts must now be focused.


This article was written for the World Economic Forum by Coen van Oostrom, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, EDGE, OVG Real Estate

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