Going Green: Wellness and Sustainability Are the New Cornerstones in Real Estate

By Elliman Insiders | Published on August 11, 2022

By Bill Van Parys

A curious thing happened in the eco-friendly and wellness architectural movements recently. After plugging away independently for years as niche concepts with their own certifications (LEED and WELL), the two converged and became not just mainstream but major. Suddenly, “environmental wellness” and “sustainability” have become the hottest buzzwords in real estate.

at’s causing the green wave? A “perfect storm” of forces, according to John Clifford of S9 Architecture in New York. Consumers were already leaning toward eco- friendly brands and sustainable products. Companies were responding to the wellness craze with strategies like improving indoor air quality and adding recharge rooms with comfy seating and healthy snacks. Then news coverage sparked widespread concern over climate change, which combined with hyperawareness of health and stress during the pandemic. Naturally, these trends spilled into residential real estate design and renovation, giving rise to a multitude of innovations meant to improve health and happiness.

For today’s luxury buyers, sustainable and wellness elements are a top priority, says Eddie Maestri of Maestri Studio and Maestri Gallery in Dallas.

In fact, according to the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) 2022 Trends Report, “Health and wellness continue to dominate both residential and commercial design. Sustainability has also shifted from a nice-to-have to a must-have for designers and consumers alike.”

RETHINKING OUR SPACES

As a result of spending huge amounts of time in our houses and apartments during quarantine, “we have re-created the home as our mental-wellness refuge,”

Maestri says. Imaginative architects, designers, and homeowners are radically reinventing their ideas about what building materials they choose and how to use spaces in the home.

Topping Maestri’s clients’ wish list is a yearning for “separation—ways to escape daily stress.” He helps them achieve this through yoga and meditation areas; home gyms; exercise, sauna, and steam rooms; spa-like “wellness” bathrooms; and prayer rooms.

An even more important driver is “the desire to blur the lines between indoors and out” at home, he says. For example, a home might feature floor-to-ceiling windows or sliding glass doors that draw the eye to the landscape. This indoor/outdoor aesthetic might be enhanced with wood or stone flooring that flows from outdoor to indoor spaces separated by glass doors in order to connect them visually.

At the same time, home offices are becoming smaller and more private, but having a pleasing view has become paramount, Maestri adds.

MATERIAL MATTERS

When it comes to building a new home or updating an existing home, “green” features range from passive solar design (which uses sunlight to help with heating and cooling) to using eco-friendly paints, installing energy- efficient appliances, and including repurposed bricks or beams.

The most significant trend emerging right now is renewed interest in authenticity—what things are as opposed to what they look like—because it ties the rest together,” says Anni Tilt, of ecological planning and design firm Arkin Tilt Architects in Berkeley, California. Arkin Tilt was founded 25 years ago on the principle that “caring about your own wellness and that of the planet are two threads of the same narrative.”

Why does authenticity matter? “Embodied carbon— carbon being spent during construction—is more critical to addressing climate change than energy performance. Construction materials can be extraordinarily carbon- intensive, or they can be the opposite,” says Tilt. “Rapidly renewable biogenic materials like straw, hemp, mushrooms, and bamboo [can] store carbon while still being durable and high-performing, all while adding authentic character and a sense of craft.

“This has the potential to be a period of great creativity when we reinvent how we build to bring delight, meaning, and beauty into our built environment,” Tilt says.

Kyndal Gross