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Courses/Architecture/RIBA: Sustainable Architecture

Demonstrating the Value of Sustainability in Architecture

Master the strategies to prove the financial and environmental ROI of green building to clients, confidently securing buy-in for your sustainable design initiatives.

Created byMhairi Grant
5.0
(1 reviews)
BeginnerUpdated May 13, 2026
Demonstrating the Value of Sustainability in Architecture

What You'll Learn

check_circleUnderstand sustainability as a driver of quality, comfort, and long-term value
check_circleAssess how sustainable design decisions affect occupants and everyday use
check_circleApply clearer narratives to explain sustainability to clients and stakeholders
check_circleEvaluate common misconceptions that undermine sustainable design intent
check_circleDemonstrate the value of low-energy and Passivhaus-informed approaches

About This Course

Sustainability is now a baseline expectation in architectural practice, yet it is still too often framed in narrow terms of compliance, ratings, or technical performance. When reduced to a checklist, its broader value can be overlooked — particularly its contribution to design quality, occupant comfort, resilience, and long-term client outcomes.

This session reframes sustainability as a core driver of architectural value rather than a regulatory requirement. It explores how low-energy design, Passivhaus principles, and natural materials translate into tangible benefits for users and clients, and equips architects with practical ways to communicate and defend these outcomes through clear, credible, and design-led narratives.

Key Topics Discussed:

  • Baseline Expectations vs. Narrow Metrics in Sustainability
  • The Fabric-First Design Approach over High-Tech Systems
  • Airtightness vs. Vapor Openness (Breathability) Misconceptions
  • Integrating Added Sustainability Aspirations for Domestic Clients
  • Natural, Healthy, and Low-Embodied Carbon Material Strategies
  • Architectural Qualities, Natural Light, and Mental Well-being
  • Systemic Environmental Impacts and Global Interconnectedness
  • Regulation and Funding Initiatives as Performance Catalysts
  • Navigating Planning Hurdles and Providing Policy-Backed Reasons
  • Upskilling Local Contractors through Site Support and Toolbox Talks
  • The Risk of Late-Stage Value Engineering on Sustainability Add-ons
  • Post-Occupancy Evaluation (POE) and Closing the Performance Gap
  • The Shift toward Regenerative Design and Net Positive Impacts

Your Instructor

Mhairi Grant
Mhairi Grant

Director at Paper Igloo Architecture + Design

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star1 reviews

Mhairi is an expert in designing energy-efficient homes that are as comfortable as they are sustainable. A certified Passivhaus designer with PHPP Expert qualification, a RIAS Sustainability Accredited Architect, a Living Futures accredited professional, and a Section 6: Energy Assessor for domestic projects, she brings a deep understanding of how to create homes that reduce energy use and maximise comfort. Whether you’re planning to build a low-energy home or need guidance on energy assessments, Mhairi’s expertise covers everything from hygrothermal analysis to the latest sustainability practices. Beyond her design work, she serves as the RIAS Stirling Chapter vice president and is an active member of the RIAS Sustainability Working Group, helping to shape the future of energy-efficient architecture.

Credit Information

What Students Are Saying

5.0
Student's Choice
1 reviews

Frequently Asked Questions

We are a registered provider with 327+ associations and regulatory bodies worldwide. We operate across 29 global markets including Canada, the US, Australia, and the UK. Every course page clearly displays its specific accreditations. Upon completion, you receive a professional certificate that can be validated online. Our certificates include all necessary accreditation details, credit hours, and completion dates, and are formatted specifically to meet the submission requirements of most global regulatory bodies.