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.2024 Jul 2;14(1):15120.
doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-65768-w.

Indoor environmental quality in WELL-certified and LEED-certified buildings

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Indoor environmental quality in WELL-certified and LEED-certified buildings

Michael G Kent et al. Sci Rep..

Abstract

International building certification systems, such as the WELL and Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards, play a pivotal role in the design of healthy and sustainable buildings. While LEED adopts a holistic approach to designing healthy and sustainable buildings, the WELL standard has a strong emphasis on human health, comfort, and well-being. Although prior research has revealed inconsistent results for occupant satisfaction in office buildings with WELL certification compared to buildings without WELL certification, or are certified using another certification system (e.g., LEED), most of these comparisons tend to lack methodological rigor. This study used a statistical procedure to match and compare 1634 occupant surveys from LEED-certified buildings to 1634 surveys from WELL-certified buildings. Six important architectural and experiential parameters were matched, masking their influence on the outcome. Overall building and workspace satisfaction was high in both WELL-certified buildings (94% and 87%) and LEED-certified (73% and 71%). We found that there is a 39% higher probability of finding occupants who are more satisfied in WELL-certified buildings compared to LEED-certified buildings, indicating occupant satisfaction is higher in buildings with WELL certification. Although we were unable to pinpoint the reason for higher occupant satisfaction in WELL-certified buildings, the results consistently showed that perceived indoor environmental quality was enhanced across all parameters except for the amount of space.

© 2024. The Author(s).

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Statistical analyses that compare the 3268 matched responses from WELL (n = 1634) and LEED (n = 1634) certified buildings for satisfaction with the overall building (left) and workspace (right). (a) Distributions of occupant satisfaction. The numerical values indicate the percentage of occupant responses, indicating higher satisfaction in WELL-certified buildings for both overall building and workspace. (b) Density plots show the concentration of responses on the 7-point Likert satisfaction scale. The diamonds indicate the mean values based on the numerically coded values that correspond to the survey’s scale. The mean values for both satisfaction items are higher in WELL-certified buildings. The Mann–Whitney U test shows that the differences in occupant satisfaction are statistically significant (p ≤ 0.005) and the effect size is practically significant (ρ > 0.20) for the overall building and for the workspace. (c) Probabilities of higher satisfaction occurring in WELL-certified or LEED-certified buildings, or there being no difference, when randomly selecting two responses from both certification groups. We resampled from the original dataset to generate 1000 unique responses for the WELL and LEED groups. The Cliff’s δ shows there are higher probabilities of selecting an occupant response associated with higher satisfaction in a WELL than in a LEED-certified building.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Plots comparing satisfaction with 14 IEQ parameters in WELL-certified and LEED-certified buildings. (a) Inverted boxplots comparing the 25th, 50th (median), and 75th percentiles. The circles are the mean values. The IEQ parameters have been ordered from increasing (‘ease of interaction’) to decreasing satisfaction (‘sound privacy’). Occupant satisfaction is consistently higher in WELL-certified buildings for every IEQ parameter. (b) The mean difference between WELL-certified and LEED-certified buildings and the associated statistical significance according to the Mann–Whitney U test. (*) indicates that every comparison was statistically significant (p ≤ 0.005). (c) Effect sizes (ρ) for each comparison. The differences are ‘small’ (0.20 ≤ ρ < 0.50) for 13 IEQ parameters and ‘negligible’ (ρ < 0.20) for the parameter ‘amount of space’. The largest effect size was for ‘sound privacy’.
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References

    1. Altomonte S, Schiavon S, Kent MG, Brager G. Indoor environmental quality and occupant satisfaction in green-certified buildings. Build. Res. Inf. 2017;47:255–274. doi: 10.1080/09613218.2018.1383715. - DOI
    1. International WELL Building Institute. Standard | WELL V2. (International WELL Building Institute pbc, 2020).
    1. U.S. Green Building Council. LEED v4.1: Building Design and Construction. (U.S. Green Building Council, United States, 2020).
    1. International WELL Building Institute. Scoring and awards. WELL Certificaitonhttps://v2.wellcertified.com/en/wellv2/overview (2023).
    1. U.S. Green Building Council. LEED rating system | U.S. Green Building Council. How LEED workshttps://www.usgbc.org/leed (2023).

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