Skip to main content
Peter Devereaux Named Senior Fellow of the Design Futures Council!
HED is excited to share that our Chairman and CEO, Peter Devereaux, FAIA, LEED AP, has been named a 2020 Senior Fellow by the Design Futures Council (DFC)!

The Design Futures Council (DFC) is a gathering of development, architecture, design, engineering, construction, product, and technology leaders who explore global trends, challenges, and opportunities to advance innovation and shape the future of architecture, engineering, construction and design. Each year the DFC convenes summits on issues of strategic importance to leaders such as technology and applied innovation, collaboration, education and talent, sustainability, and the business of design. By convening summits on central issues, including sustainability, education, and business leadership, the Council promotes collaboration across multiple disciplines. Together, its members and senior fellows uncover insights that move the built environment industry toward social and environmental wholeness.

The Senior Fellows program, which now includes some 200 distinguished leaders, honors its members’ significant contributions to the built environment industry disciplines. The council introduced the newest group of inductees to this exclusive program during their two-day online Leadership Summit on the Business of Design, held on November 11th and 12th.

"The Design Futures Council regularly brings together a diverse and engaging group of thought leaders connected to the built environment for an exchange of ideas that spark innovation," says Devereaux. "I’m so proud to be associated with this organization and the discussions we have on technology, sustainable design, the business of design and design education. I am humbled and honored to be included in this year’s class of DFC Senior Fellows.”

To be inducted, candidates must have a consistent and successful career in built environment industry professions extending a minimum of 20 years while achieving indisputable leadership in business, design, education, technology, and/or innovation that has raised the performance of the organizations they have led, as well as be recognized by peers at the Design Futures Council as actively contributing to move the whole community forward.

The council’s Senior Fellowship includes noted architects, designers and educators, as well as thought leaders from other disciplines and practices, including David Adjaye, Steven Holl, Frank Gehry, Sir Norman Foster, Zaha Hadid, Maya Lin, Bruce Mau, John Maeda, Milton Glaser, Jan Gehl, and Al Gore.

"Peter’s induction to the Senior Fellows of the Design Futures Council is a well-deserved recognition for his significant contributions to the architectural profession and the built environment," says Tania Van Herle, Corporate Systems Leader with HED, "Serving as a mentor to me over my career, Peter embodies the key traits of a Senior Fellow: leading our firm and others in addressing the complex issues facing our industry, driving innovation in a socially and environmentally responsible manner, and serving as a voice for the importance design plays in our world."


Please join us in congratulating Peter on this great distinction!

Drew Roskos' "Incorporating the Pandemic Experience into Design" in Seniors Housing Business
Recently Senior Housing Sector Leader Drew Roskos' thoughts on Incorporating the Pandemic Experience into Design was published in Seniors Housing Business, you can use the link below to read the article there.

"Now in month six of our country’s full-scale reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are all embracing today’s heightened awareness of public health across the board, especially in our field of senior living.

As of this writing, roughly one-third of COVID-19 cases reported have been in senior living communities. As research continues to teach us more about the spread of the virus who is at the greatest risk, we are also likely all growing in our realization of how this pandemic experience will impact the creation of the senior living facilities of the future.

Our national housing team at HED is working to layer pandemic-related design thinking in with the accumulated design understanding of best design practices. While certainly our healthcare design colleagues, and many of us working in the housing sector, have already considered traditional germ and disease flow for years, we know this pandemic will increase the expectations of occupants, developers and building visitors for decades to come — as it should.

What has not changed, though, is our insistence on keeping quality of life and resident happiness as the priority for design success. For both residents and staff, a community is only successful if it serves the needs of the occupants. So, when it comes to both quality of life and health, these groups will always warrant the most important consideration.

What we need to hold on to

Senior living communities that are in dense areas with a strong connection — both physically and programmatically — to the larger, public community will continue to be the most successful and the healthiest environments for older adults. Social connectivity, and its impact on mental and physical health, will continue to be a top priority of this population group, both during the remainder of this pandemic event and long after. It’s an aspect that we can’t lose sight of on the heels of this experience.

We need to continue to actively solve for those needs while also incorporating healthy design responses to today’s research around this virus and other communicable diseases. Our mandate will be to find a balance between helping families be comforted by this new level of care without feeling constricted by it.

Well before we knew of COVID-19, senior living communities would change their operations or increase physical distancing as a result of busy flu seasons, pneumonia outbreaks or otherwise. Programming and scheduled activities changed to account for these concerns, and staff members wore masks, gloves and other personal protective equipment (PPE) in order to do their part in containing these germs.

But with a heightened consumer awareness of these kinds of health challenges now, we can all expect a more careful eye on the facility itself and its role in disease spread, especially when potential residents are considering their options.

Additionally, the seniors housing industry was creatively moving to utilize more external resources in fulfilling the care of their patients. From telehealth visits to video-based activity engagement, these systemic changes were already helping to reduce the outside visits from excess people.

As this shift toward external care providers, and a reduction in onsite staff continues much more on the road ahead, it is my hope that we see a balance on our facilities’ accommodation of family and visits with loved ones, and less on providers.

How will we adapt?

To start, the first adaptation we need to make is to the design process itself.

From the onset of a facility’s design effort, we need to be prepared to also design what we are calling a “health management overlay.” This overlay should be crafted with operational leaders to ensure the feasibility of specific ideas in the event of another public health crisis, or even smaller-scale crises that we will now want to be better prepared for.

Operators must consider everything from the spatial needs of telehealth appointments to where the extra chairs are stored when social distancing; and from the creation of processing spaces to identifying places for the additional location of permanent hand washing stations. This new overlay opportunity will allow a facility to be designed with a typical health condition in mind, while preparing for these kinds of frightening atypical events as well.

When it comes to more permanent physical design changes for future facilities, there are a few that will need to be implemented without a doubt.

One of those is a greater focus on HVAC design — considering adding zones and increasing air filtration as a result of this pandemic. While mechanical systems have moved toward more efficient choices in an effort to reduce energy consumption, these new lenses of filtration effectiveness and isolation compartmentalization will take a more center-stage role in the years ahead as well.

We are also confident that outdoor spaces will be significantly re-examined in the years ahead. From the simple mathematical need to increase social distance, to a pent-up desire to be outdoors after initial quarantines evolved, we are now excited to focus on the most effective design of outdoor space for a larger variety of lifestyle needs for our seniors.

While the importance of active spaces and walking paths remain for the physical health of our seniors, we are now also eager to increase the crafting of intimate spaces where people can passively watch outdoor activities from a safe distance or gather in small groups to connect amidst the fresh outdoor air.

Another noticeable area where we all saw an immediate opportunity was technology. Those facilities that were more technology-enabled had more options when it came time to change their typical operations. From walking into and out of rooms without needing to touch switches, to hosting virtual family hangouts, technology proved to be the greatest gap creator between the haves and the have-nots. We see this continuing to drive the conversation as we create new communities moving forward.

And in the area of access control, independent living or active adult communities might see an uptick in multiple entrances, creating ways for facilities to lock down individual halls or break resident groups down into smaller groups or neighborhoods. This idea, though, will certainly not shift in the memory care or skilled nursing, where security and safety of resident arrival and departure will continue to take priority.

No need for overreaction

The most important point on the mind of our team, as we actively work on the design of new senior living facilities, is to not “react” our way into new problems.

While pandemic woes will certainly weigh heavy on the minds of operators and families for many years to come, we know there are many dimensions to health. The opportunity to learn from this unique viral experience is most certainly great, and it is an important opportunity to seize. We are excited to apply today’s senior living lessons to our design process.

As always, though, we must all be careful to make long-term decisions for our buildings based on a holistic set of industry knowledge, not just around unique experiences or isolated information garnered from our journeys along the way.
Veoneer featured in CAM Magazine's Top 12 Projects of the Year
HED is excited to share the latest issue of Construction Association of Michigan (CAM) Magazine's Top 12 Projects of 2020 issue, featuring the Veoneer North American Technical Competence Center (NATCC) in Southfield, MI!

Designed by HED to help shape the company’s future in autonomous driving and active safety systems, the new technical center features both office and automotive testing spaces. Research and testing labs most effectively met on a first-floor ground level location with amenities on the higher floors. This unique stacking of the program allowed the new 180,000 square foot facility to be contained within a very compact, cost-effective four-story volume to maximize the square footage and overall potential of the site.

"With the need for multiple uses within the same structure, HED's designers sought to stack the program with large structural clear spans on the first floor for testing, team workplace platforms on the second and third floors, and amenities on the top floor.

Jutting out from the business park, Veoneer’s sleek black, grey and white design with modern paneling and large windows provides a duality of modernism and nature coexisting into the horizon for the benefit of a signature identity and work practicalities alike. 'The progressive palette set it off from its surroundings. Many other buildings in the area have the traditional safe building palettes. This one has a more European look, especially with the cutout terrace as an architectural feature,' said HED architect Jack Bullo.
Lathrop Homes receives 2020 Landmarks IL Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Preservation Award for Rehabilitation
HED is both honored and gratified to share that the Lathrop Homes has been awarded the ENR Midwest Best Project of 2020 Residential/Hospitality category and more recently the Landmarks Illinois Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Preservation Award for Rehabilitation!

Landmarks Illinois is the state’s leading voice for historic preservation and is a key facilitator, promoter and educator on historic preservation, encompassing architecturally and historically significant sites, structures and districts in all the cities, towns and rural areas of Illinois. As stated on Landmark's website:

"A Nationally Registered Historic Place - the Julia C. Lathrop Homes project has produced 414 mixed-income residences for Chicago’s North Side and restored 16 of the original 32 buildings first constructed in 1938 under the Public Works Administration. The first phase of the project – completed in 2019 – is the result of a seven-year planning process led by Lathrop Community Partners (LCP) that included community engagement and thoughtful consideration for how one of the nation’s earliest public housing projects should be reused to serve residents. The rehabilitated campus is home to two- and three-story, walk-up rowhouses, property management and retail space, a boat house, woodshop and a future community room for residents. The property’s Great Lawn, which fronts the Chicago River, originally a Jens Jensen design, has also been restored as a green space for both the Lathrop residents and the surrounding community to enjoy."
Subscribe to