Collaboration between certification schemes said to be in response to demand from prime office developers

Heat map towers

The BREEAM and WELL building standards have signed a collaboration deal to recognise both sustainability and wellbeing best practice in buildings.

By next month, BRE and the US-based International WELL ΢Ȧ Institute (IWBI) will offer 35% of credits on each other’s certification schemes.

Speaking to ΢Ȧ, BRE director of performance Gavin Dunn said the collaboration between the two standards was “very much a response to a market need” after “top London prime office developers” told BRE their clients wanted both sustainability and wellbeing in their buildings.

He added: “Having that formal recognition [of the WELL standard when going through BREEAM], so you can confidently jump and make that bridge across those different stakeholders is important, because there’s nothing like uncertainty to hold up a real estate deal, right?”

Dunn said the collaboration was also designed to address issues affecting some zero-carbon developments where occupiers have complained about air quality or thermal comfort.

Paul Scallia, founder of the IWBI, told ΢Ȧ the collaboration will help architects and engineers to design buildings for wellbeing.

He said: “Architects, designers, engineers – they love it. They’ve been designing for the human condition since they first picked up the pencil. What they haven’t had is a toolkit, put together by informed medical science, to design towards.”

The collaboration comes as industrial developer Baytree, a subsidiary of property investor Axa Real Estate, announced it is set to build the world’s first BREEAM and WELL certified new-build project in Dagenham, Essex.

When completed the buildings, set to be occupied by a manufacturing and logistics firms, will achieve BREEAM “excellent”, an EPC rating of A and the WELL ΢Ȧ Standard accreditation for occupier wellness.

BRE also announced that it has launched a research programme into BREEAM to “support its ongoing development” and get feedback from users.