Chapter 1: Capital Projects and Building Assessment
Chapter 2: Fallingwater: A Celebrated Case of DAV Analysis
Chapter 3: Value Based Design
PART II DAV Analysis Methods
Chapter 4: Cost Benefit with Risk Analysis
Chapter 5: Elicitation Methods
Chapter 6: Pre-Facto and Post-Facto Analysis
Chapter 7: Quantitative DAV Analysis Methods
Chapter 8: Expertise, Innovation, and Creativity in Support of DAV
PART III: DAV Analysis of Two Seminal Case Studies
Chapter 9: The Swiss Re Tower, A Detailed Case Study
Chapter 10: The Commerzbank Tower: Analysis of Another Seminal Case
PART IV: Selected Case Studies
Chapter 11: John Hancock Tower, Boston
Chapter 12: Kansas City Hyatt Regency
Chapter 13: Pruitt-Igoe, Saint Louis, MO
Chapter 14: Crystal Palace, London
Chapter 15: Sydney Opera House
Chapter 16: Citicorp Tower
Appendix DAV Supplemental Materials for Analyzing the Case Studies
Bibliography and Citations
Ömer Akın, PhD, AIA was Professor Emeritus of Architecture and Courtesy Faculty in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA.
Dr. Akın was also CEO of Architectural Design Associates (ADA), Inc. ADA publishes professional texts as well as fiction, including the following titles: Representation and Architecture (1982), Psychology of Architectural Design (1986, 1989), Generative CAD Systems (2005), A Cartesian Approach to Design Rationality (2006), Embedded Commissioning (2011) and Ethical Decision Making in Architecture (2018). His publishers include Information Dynamics Inc., Pion, Inc., Carnegie Mellon University Press, METU Press, Artech House, Inc., Springer, and CreateSpace, Inc.
Dr. Akin served as Professor of Architecture at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, since 1978. He was a well-published researcher with several hundred reviewed publications, and texts that include the titles cited above among others. His research interests included design cognition, computer aided design, case-based design instruction, ethical decision making, value-based design, building commissioning, and automated design requirement management. He has also served as the Head of the School of Architecture and the director of the graduate programs.
Design has intrinsic, economic value. To make this value tangible, design features of buildings need to be explored, measured, and taken into account when initiating projects and financing their construction. It is as calculable as the extrinsic value of a project. However, we need concepts, strategies, methods, techniques, and tools to do just that.
The Value Based Design approach and Design-Added Value (D-AV) methodology in this book enables architects, engineers, contractors and owner-clients of buildings to benefit from extraordinary design and construction features. It explains the rationale and motivation for D-AV methodology, outlines and illustrates this methodology with examples, provides complete and detailed examples of how the key analysis techniques work through historical case studies, and describes specific methods used in application of the D-AV methodology, such as Bayesian statistics, cost benefit analysis, pairwise comparison techniques, cognitive walkthroughs, and optimization.