Technology empowered building design means the places where we live and work have the potential to meet more of our human needs than ever before.

When we combine the opportunities that digitalisation, new materials and methods bring to building design with advances to reduce our carbon footprint, buildings can start serving their occupants in truly transformative ways.

Meeting our basic human needs

Building design innovation will always be driven by multiple basic human needs.

One of the most well-known theories on our hierarchy of needs is Maslow’s theory, which describes human motivations on an ascending scale, from fundamental physical and safety needs, through to social, esteem and the more complex cognitive and self-actualisation needs, where technologies to enhance the occupant’s creativity, happiness and comfort increasingly come into their own.

Moving up the pyramid

From the perspective of building developers, owners, and contractors, safety has long been the priority human need addressed in building design. This is evident in the way buildings are both developed and marketed – with emphasis on safety systems and security features protecting against electricity and fire hazards, as well as workmanship guarantees.

Today’s buildings draw on new technology and automation capabilities for a more finely tuned balance between individual safety and comfort. Fundamental physiological needs such as warmth and rest are ensured using smart building management systems.

In the post-pandemic workplace, designers and architects are also responding to a heightened need for communal health and safety to be balanced with social interaction, by designing spaces that allow people to mingle at a comfortable, hygienic distance and choose their level of engagement. The communal harmony and aesthetic pleasure that modern buildings offer progress to meeting higher levels of the pyramid, towards the more abstract and refined needs at the top.

Greater societal need

The critical imperative to protect the earth’s climate is both a larger societal challenge and basic individual need for us all: climate change represents a primary need when it threatens our safety.

As a global society, and in each community, we must save energy and lower carbon emissions, urgently. Of course, electrification of heating and cooling is one step in that journey. Whether new build or a retrofit, many buildings will go 100 percent electric; removing all fossil fuel systems and using a mixture of sustainable grid power and renewables as part of its power provision.

In addition, both new and retrofitted buildings are integrating climate-friendly technology such as solar panels, smart building control systems, and energy management systems, all within the building campus. This constant state of innovation allows developers, building designers and architects to envisage lighting effects and allow vast atrium solutions, which help balance the need for efficient energy management with other human needs.

Sustainability bridges to our highest levels of need

Interestingly, addressing climate change by building sustainability also provides a bridge to the highest levels of human need. Esteem, accomplishment, and self-realisation are all nourished by creating structures with pioneering green credentials.

At the very top of the pyramid, the domain of self-actualisation, is where our most defining and fragile needs are played out against the material world. Creativity and appreciation of aesthetic form – traits, which are especially human – are allowed to flourish in buildings and environments where both our fundamental needs and society’s aspirations are fulfilled.

From Singapore’s beautiful Jewel Changi airport, to the gentle rippling wooden facade of the Oodi Library in Helsinki, to the soft enveloping curves of the Viettel Headquarters in Vietnam, we have seen an explosion in innovative architecture over the last few years. Both striking in looks and using revolutionary technologies under the skin, I am convinced that we are witnessing the birth of the truly smart, thinking building.

Seen in the light of our shared human need for safety, belonging, and creative expression, it is clear that the human-centric structures we build are more than just temples to great design, more than great-looking spaces, more than just intelligent or smart buildings.

They are an active and essential component of how we live our lives. They help us realise a more sustainable future where we not only work and play but grow, excel and ultimately thrive as individuals and communities.

Written by Mike Mustapha - Division President of ABB Smart Buildings