PS&S Senior Director Ted Osborne Shares Insight in NAIOP

 

At times like these, everyone involved in design, engineering and construction must wonder if it is time to change our thinking – or maybe hit the reset button. We have reason to do this after natural disasters of all kinds: the Louisiana floods in 2016, Hurricane Maria in 2017, the California wildfires in 2018, to name just a few.

An infectious disease outbreak on the scale of COVID-19 is its own kind of disaster. From a design and construction point of view, planning for something that has happened only once in 100 years in the United States has not been a front-burner issue, but maybe it should be now. As an industry, we need to explore ways to reduce infectious disease spread in buildings, decide how that effort takes shape and, of course, determine how owners and operators are incentivized to make changes.

COVID-19 is airborne, spread through coughs and sneezes and travelling easily across tight quarters. For all these reasons, many office workers feel anxious about returning to a physical space. 

As architects and engineers, some firms, including ours, are beginning to re-think how to build commercial space to eliminate or reduce the spread of pathogens in the air and on surfaces. Indeed, we are moving our entire office headquarters’ staff into a new 44,000-square-foot space in New Jersey next month, and we have been looking at what can be done to make the space safer.

Here are some of the things we are exploring:

  • Increasing space between people to allow for social distancing.

  • Increasing outdoor air flow – Doing so “dilutes” the air, meaning more fresh air and less potentially contaminated air per person. This can be done by disabling demand-controlled ventilation and increasing minimum outdoor air damper positions.

  • Air filtration – Using the higher-rated filters as ranked by the Minimum Efficiency Rating Value (MERV) system, which rates air filter efficiency. MERV 13 and above are commonly used in hospitals and other healthcare facilities. The filters will also be sealed to the filter rack for great efficiency in trapping particles and limiting bypass.

  • Running systems more often or for longer hours – Circulating and filtering air more frequently helps increase the effectiveness of increased outdoor air rates and improved filtration; 24/7 would be optimal.

  • Indoor air cleaners – Deploying portable room air cleaners with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters. As the name suggests, these devices filter 99.97% of particles over a certain size.

  • Installing CASPR devices – Used in hospitals, Continuous Air and Surface Pathogen Reduction systems spray trace amounts of hydrogen peroxide into indoor air, killing 99.9% of pathogens in the air and on surfaces. Eight of these speaker-sized units were installed at Long Island MacArthur Airport in May.

  • More easily cleaned surfaces – Using less fabric in design.

  • Reducing touch points – We are fortunate to already have many ways to reduce the likelihood of a virus spreading, including automatic door operation, touchless faucets and flush valves, and sensor controls for lights. 

  • Using short-wave ultraviolet (UV) light – UV light has long been well known for either killing or deactivating bacteria, viruses, mold and other pathogens. In fact, in 1903, the Nobel Prize was awarded for the treatment of tuberculosis of the skin using UV light. 

In buildings today, short-wave, more intense UV light is used for Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation (UVGI) in high-room (9-feet or higher) lighting applications in mechanical units and heating ducts to kill pathogens without damage to person’s skin or eyes. An eight-year study of 14 homeless shelters published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information concluded that UVGI is safe and effective for buildings.

  • Utilizing lower-wave UV light – Not hazardous to eyes and skin, lower-wave UV light can also be effective and is available in many forms:

    • Gates and portals – Much like the X-ray booths at airport security, manufacturers are offering gates and portals that use UV light to deactivate a high percentage (over 90%) of pathogens on people and clothing.

    • Troffers – Troffers are the rectangular fixtures in dropped ceilings that hold fluorescent lights, as well as, more recently, LED lights. A unit that uses both UV light and HEPA filters to trap and inactivate pathogens including viruses can be newly installed or retrofitted into troffers to help stop the spread of disease. 

To borrow from the saying, “change tends to be evolutionary, not revolutionary,” we are suggesting that the spread-resistant building is an aspiration – just like fire safety, net zero and hurricane proofing. Short-term, simple fixes in office air quality, lighting and touch points could help prevent another wave. Longer-term, we believe that the goal of spread-resistance should move closer to the front of the line in our initial design and construction consideration set.

 
Source: https://blog.naiop.org/2020/09/the-spread-...

Marilyn Lennon as part of NAIOP NJ virtual conference in New Jersey Business Magazine

 

Officials, Industry Experts Discuss New Processes and Policies Affecting Real Estate Development

Government officials and industry experts addressed the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on how the state’s regulatory agencies are operating, what the Legislature is prioritizing and the effect it is having on the real estate development process during NAIOP New Jersey’s annual Regulatory, Legislative & Legal Update. The agenda for the virtual event, part of the commercial real estate development association’s Building a Better NJ series, ranged from the latest on reopening efforts to compliance with new green infrastructure stormwater rules.

Read the entire story here: https://njbmagazine.com/njb-news-now/officials-industry-experts-discuss-new-processes-and-policies/

 
Source: https://njbmagazine.com/njb-news-now/offic...

Carrol Oliva Featured in Real Estate New Jersey

 

Engineering group honors PS&S water treatment expert, a 60-year industry veteran

A veteran engineer and architect with PS&S has earned a top honor from the American Society of Civil Engineers’ New Jersey section.

The Warren-based firm announced that the association has recognized Carroll Oliva as its 2020 Civil Engineer of the Year. The award comes after more than 60 years of experience in sanitary engineering and architecture, during which he has been involved in planning, design and construction for hundreds of projects at large-scale treatment plants.

 
Source: https://re-nj.com/engineering-group-honors...

ASCE NJ Announces Carroll Oliva as 2020 Civil Engineer of the Year

 

Congratulations to our Carroll J. Oliva - who was awarded as ASCE NJ's Civil Engineer of the Year!

We are proud to see him recognized for all his contributions. Oliva joined PS&S and established the company’s sanitary engineering group in 1989. For 12 years he provided process and architectural wastewater expertise while mentoring many designers, engineers and technical staff along the way. Oliva returned to PS&S in 2014 to continue his contributions to the Water Resources practice.

 

PS&S Senior Director Ted Osborne takes part of Real Estate NJ Roundtable

 

RE-NJ: How can construction teams use technology to ensure social distancing going forward?

Harry “Ted” Osborne, senior director, building services group, PS&S

A typical picture of a construction site might show four to five engineers wearing yellow hardhats huddled together all looking at the same a blueprint — basically, the exact opposite of “social distancing.” But, in fact, the construction industry is remarkably well set up for working virtually. Some examples: Virtual white boards: Yes, exactly, as the name implies, architects can collaborate online, brainstorm and even sketch together. Drones, which can take site and construction progress pictures and be used for exterior inspections. Augmented reality hardware: With new screen and helmet camera technologies, it’s possible for a construction manager in an office and a subcontractor at the job site to see the same thing at the same time, comparing plans with the actual work. 3D printing and prefabbing: Many projects can be built off site and then delivered to the site. My firm expects that these and other virtual and remote solutions will now gain even greater traction.

Read the rest here: https://re-nj.com/how-can-construction-teams-use-technology-to-ensure-social-distancing-going-forward/

 
Source: https://re-nj.com/how-can-construction-tea...

PS&S Senior Director of Architecture Chuck Clauser quoted in Avionics International

 
With the launch of its Uber Air service planned for 2023, the company is designing Skyports to regulations and industry standards that don't yet exist. Photo: Uber

With the launch of its Uber Air service planned for 2023, the company is designing Skyports to regulations and industry standards that don't yet exist. Photo: Uber

Uber revealed some details about its approach to building ground infrastructure for urban air mobility — which it calls ‘Skyports’ — as the company seeks to make progress despite a dearth of industry standards and regulations.

Through Uber Elevate, the ridesharing giant is working with at least eight developers of electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, to be used for urban aviation in concert with cars, scooters and other modes of public transportation.

With the launch of its Uber Air service planned for 2023 in Melbourne, Los Angeles and Dallas, the company — and others planning to be early investors in ground infrastructure for urban air mobility — faces the challenge of building and designing in an uncertain environment.

“Federal, city, state and perhaps county approvals will all be based on regulations yet to come for the most part,” said Chuck Clauser, senior director of architecture at PS&S and head of the company’s UAM task force. “Location will be dependent on zoning, surrounding airspace and aerial routes, aviation approvals, impact on pedestrian and vehicular traffic, parking, energy requirements, firefighting accessibility … there are a whole host of factors that have to be considered.”

Continue reading more on Avionics International: https://www.aviationtoday.com/2020/05/11/heres-uber-designing-skyports-future-air-taxis/

 
Source: https://www.aviationtoday.com/2020/05/11/h...