Sculptor Real Estate lent $68 million to a joint venture between Spinnaker and Eastpointe to build a luxury rental project in Bridgeport.
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Scooped by
Lorien Pratt
onto Pandemic Safe Buildings |
Sculptor Real Estate lent $68 million to a joint venture between Spinnaker and Eastpointe to build a luxury rental project in Bridgeport.
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Pandemic Safe Buildings
News about keeping buildings safe -- for facilities executives, architects, risk officers, safety officers, civil engineers, retrofitters, public health officials, safety equipment vendors, building owners, and more. Our focus is on _evidence-based_ advanced technology and models that help decision makers to understand the cost and safety impact of safety choices. Our holy grail is a list of the optimal decisions for every individual building, given the current knowledge about the pandemic. In the past, we've kept buildings safe from dangers like fire, flood, and mold. Now it's time to add pathogen safety to the list. This page tracks the latest news. Sign up here to join the pandemic safe buildings community: https://forms.aweber.com/form/93/1344673093.htm Curated by Lorien Pratt |
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
If annual averages were the only information we considered, 79 AD in Pompeii was a slightly warmer year than usual—hardly a situation worthy of serious concern. As you can see with this example, averages, when assessing outlier risks, often make very bad metrics.
More about how average values can be misleading, and so getting more granular can help us understand covid-19, climate change, and more.
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"...the temperature of 95°F is such a value. Stay below it, and very few people die. Rise above it and people start dying, and the higher the temperature rises, the greater the mortality. The chart below shows why a 5.7°F rise in average temperature over 50 years can lead to such deadly results."
when we use a summary statistic like an average - whether for climate temperature or Covid-19 incidence - it can mask important underlying dynamics that can make a big difference.
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The agency has not fully reckoned with airborne transmission of the coronavirus in settings like hospitals, schools and meatpacking plants, experts said.
We spend 90% of our time indoors, and many people will be going back to work in the coming months. It's time to get serious about truly Covid-19-safe workplaces, and, increasingly, the scientific community, as well as the NYT, agree.
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"In the last three decades, we’ve seen a massive change in marketing. It used to be that “one size fits all” television advertisements sent to the entire country at a time were very expensive. In contrast, today, we can spend much less money on a simple Google, Facebook, or Twitter ad that only appears on the screen of people who are likely to want to purchase the product or service. Once a pipe dream, this “one-to-one” advertising model is now standard practice worldwide....
However, this revolution in data and AI technology has not been, by and large, applied to the most impactful problems of our time, including Covid-19 and climate change. We see guidelines issues by federal and state authorities that have the same “one size fits all” character, reminiscent of television ads of the 1970s. Data about Covid-19 and climate is presented in summary statistics characterizing entire states or counties, and is often averaged out over long time periods, thereby losing its power."
AI has by and large, been applied to only a small subset of the problems that it's applicable to. Here's how AI can help with climate change pandemics.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"Evidence gathered this fall around the world and in the U.S. suggests that schools can open, even in conditions of wide community spread, and achieve low and even near zero transmission in the school building. This evidence, combined with the benefits to learners of in-person schooling and harms of remote schooling, suggests that the time has come to pursue in-person learning across most school contexts, provided that the school in question has established reasonable infection control protocols to safeguard student, educator (including paraprofessionals), and staff safety. The federal governments should include investments in school infection control in the next coronavirus relief package.
...The most important elements of infection control that matter are:
"
(boldface mine)
General-purpose guidelines for all schools, which promises near-zero infection rates. If this is true (I haven't validated the research behind it myself yet: please drop me a line if you have) it's very important news.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
The project involves an environmental monitor small enough to fit on a desk that tracks air quality and ventilation; a wrist monitor that tracks sleep and physical activity; and an iPhone app that feeds researchers real-time data.
unifying personal health with building health data, Harvard's Joe Allen's most recent project builds on years of work studying all facets of safe buildings.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"Today there are over 55 million documented COVID-19 cases and over 1.3 million deaths, impacting countries and territories worldwide. As vaccines are developed and countries implement recovery plans, regional authorities lack the ability to test “what if” intervention plans that optimize COVID-19 mitigation strategies while reducing the economic and social impacts."
This is a very important project, which includes both predictive and prescriptive analytics.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"From office workers to students, Americans facing colder weather and more time inside have a pressing question: How can they keep safe amid a pandemic that scientists say thrives in indoor settings?
The search for answers has prompted a new look at what architects and their buildings can do to help, both now and in the future."
A good introduction into how the pendemic is accelerating already important issue, which is how buildings can be as healthy as possible for the people who occupy them
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
Although a large volume of research has been done on the epidemiology of the virus, no single efforts have integrated infection, human movement, and facility engineering modelling which can be instantly applied to workspaces. Creating this holistic view has been a key product of our prototype development.
Understanding the pandemic requires a combination of CAD drawing analysis for specific building shapes, modeling human movement, and an understanding of how aerosolized particles move through a space.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
Earlier this year, two diners at a South Korean restaurant were infected with novel coronavirus in a matter of minutes from a third patron who sat at least 15 feet away from them. The third patron was asymptomatic at the time. After dissecting that scene from June, South Korean researchers released a study last month in the Journal of Korean Medical Science that suggests the virus, under certain airflow conditions, travels farther than six feet and can infect others in as little as five minutes. …
The study confirms, says Milton [Donald Milton, professor of environmental health at the University of Maryland School of Public Health], that infected people “can shed virus into the air, and it can travel long distances, and the more air movement you got, the more you might have” the kind of scenario laid out in the South Korean restaurant study.
With more the 20 years of experience in his field, Milton doesn’t think it’ll be another 100 years before the United States experiences a pandemic similar to the one we’re living through now. As such, he would like to see governments and entrepreneurs invest in technology to make buildings and public spaces safer in the future.
Every building is different; without a simulation tool like Pandaa it’s hard to find all the “dead-end spaces” where covid can hide. You don’t want your diners to be safe at their tables but exposed when they step away to take a phone call.
And from a larger point of view, this study points out the general guidelines are just that - general. We need to be taking the great data and data analysis approaches we have obtained from precision marketing - and which are moving into precision medicine - into precision epidemiology.
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Dallas-based Building Solutions commits to donating 3,000 hours to schools in the North Texas area to perform facility assessments...Building Solutions has been an advisor to commercial real estate investors and developers, private schools, churches, and municipalities for 30 years. By pairing their technical expertise with their robust network, the company aims to not only identify the inequities in school facilities but also assist in capital fundraising for potential campus updates and as a result, help improve a student’s health, behavior, engagement, learning, and growth in achievement.
A consulting firm's pro bono effort to evaluate school buildings along multiple fronts, including pandemic health and contributions to learning inequality.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"As we evaluate our recently completed campuses, we’re finding that collaboration spaces, intended for bringing people together, are increasingly demonstrating their value. Movable partitions and a variety of furniture choices will allow classrooms to expand and create smaller learning zones. The ability to separate pods of students into separate physical spaces is going to be key going forward. It maintains those aspects of school that provide a social opportunity, serving a greater percentage of the student body in a pandemic environment."
Some pre-pandemic decisions regarding flexible and open workspaces are having unplanned benefits for schools to protect students from the coronavirus.
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" [so-called] Groundscrapers tend to have multiple entrances, in contrast to the typical skyscraper, which funnels everyone through a single lobby. The decentralization of arrivals and departures can help with social distancing, experts say."
Here's an interesting perspective on how low-rise buildings are more pandemic safe than high-rises.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"IWBI recently introduced the WELL Health-Safety Rating for Facility Operations and Management. The rating is an evidence-based rating focused on operational policies, maintenance protocols, emergency plans and stakeholder education, and works in conjunction with Safe Stay, providing additional confidence of third-party verification and a competitive advantage."
It is essential to protect members of the public as they visit hotels, and the the Well Health Safety rating helps hoteliers to demonstrate that they follow best practices
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"...the specific design of a building’s interior (along with other factors such as the HVAC system) can create invisible “hot zones” where concentrations of airborne agents, such as pathogens, CO, CO 2 , and radioactive decay products, for example, can be considerably higher than average levels measured elsewhere in the building."
The six-foot rule is a dangerous oversimplification
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THIS IS THE CHALLENGE OF YOUR LIFETIME. Maybe you're thinking..."that's a job for #epidemiology", and you're right, in part...
Some tough love for my #datascience and #softwarearchitecture friends: if you're not actively helping to solve #covid19, you're part of the problem.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
"...our objective is to advise business leaders on what they can do to prevent COVID-19 transmission through their facilities, hence we needed a model for how infection spreads within indoor spaces. Although we can see that a large volume of research has been done on the epidemiology of the virus, no single efforts have integrated infection, human movement and facility engineering modelling which can be instantly applied to workspaces. Creating this holistic view has been a key product of our prototype development."
To maximize pandemic safety, you need to go beyond simply tracking virus movement to also understanding human movement and the effect of the interventions that you place within your building.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
Data Innovation.AI was born as a company; set up specifically to create a Decision Intelligence Centre of Excellence and incubator, working in Partnership with our US Colleagues Quantellia LLC, which would take ethical embryonic Ideas, assess whether DI and AI can be applied and develop those ethical ideas through R&D, proof of concept prototyping, piloting and hopefully through to a viable commercial product or solution, assisting leaders to make AI informed decisions when faced with complexity, risk and uncertainty.
I am beyond thrilled to be working with DataInnovation.ai. These guys are doing amazing things and I expect will end up saving many lives with their fantastic work and great software ( :-) ).
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
COVID19 data is necessary, but is in many situations not sufficient, to make good decisions in complex environments.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
Dr. Lorien Pratt is a pioneer in the field of artificial intelligence and is credited for inventing transfer learning. Lorien is pushing the boundaries of technology as one of the creators and evangelists for Decision Intelligence, which is the next phase of Artificial Intelligence. In this episode, Lorien details how Decision Intelligence is merging human intelligence and artificial intelligence to create actions that lead to better outcomes. If you find this episode valuable, would you please help us by providing a review at ratethispodcast.com/blueprint
I use COVID19 as an example in this podcast of how decision intelligence is connecting the power of AI as we see in a company like Google, Amazon, and Facebook to the pandemic. DI is the "glue" that allows us to use AI in new ways.
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"/PRNewswire/ -- Fitwel®, the healthy building certification system operated by The Center for Active Design (CfAD), today announced the formal launch of the Fitwel Viral Response Module"
"The Center for Active Design (CfAD) was launched by Mayor Michael Bloomberg in 2012, to transform New York City’s groundbreaking Active Design program into an international movement.
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CfAD is the preeminent global not-for-profit organization working at the intersection of health and the built environment. We transform design and development practice to support health and ensure equitable access to vibrant public and private spaces that support optimal quality of life.
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Fitwel was originally created by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention and U.S. General Services Administration. The CDC remains the research and evaluation partner for Fitwel. The Center for Active Design, a global not-for-profit organization, was selected as the licensed operator of Fitwel, charged with expanding Fitwel to the global market."
To my understanding, the Viral Response module reviews and certifies buildings as complying with various requirements to establish policies to cover a number of topics, including, "Enhance Indoor Environment", "Encourage Behavioral Change", and "Build Occupant Trust". Importantly, it does not certify buildings themselves, rather like many similar certification organizations (ISO 9000, CMM), Fitwel focuses on policies, and leaves the details of those policies to the building developers, architects, managers, and other clients.
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Scooped by Lorien Pratt |
Informed by insights from the WELL Building Standard—the world’s premier standard for advancing health and well-being in the places where we spend our lives—the WELL Health-Safety Rating accommodates all space types as well as the specific goals and concerns of different organizations and facilities.
I'm really excited about this rating; they have educational materials and specific offerings for Sports & Entertainment, Movie Theaters, Hotels & Resorts, Restaurants, Offices, Education, Retail, Multifamily, and Industrial sectors.
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Rescooped by Lorien Pratt from Decision Intelligence News |
Brian Nosek, a University of Virginia psychology professor who has devoted his career to making scientific data more reliable and trustworthy, is frustrated. Like everyone else, he's trying to understand the pandemic, particularly in his own community of Charlottesville, and in California, where he has family.
So he wonders: Where is the virus spreading? Where is it suppressed? Where are people social distancing as they should, and where are they not? Where will he and his family be safe?
In this pandemic, we're swimming in statistics, trends, models, projections, infection rates, death tolls. Nosek has professional expertise in interpreting data, but even he is struggling to make sense of the numbers.
“What's crazy is, we're three months in, and we're still not able to calibrate our risk management. It's a mess,” said Nosek, who runs the Center for Open Science, which advocates for transparency in research. “Tell me what to do! Please!”
Decision Intelligence (DI) lets us decide what to do. DI manages data overload and lets us focus on a specific decision. Covid-19 safety decisions do not require holding all the global, aggregated statistics and projections in your head. Most critical decisions address risks at point in time for a specific facility or activity; they require not mountains of data, but understanding how, in this time and place, actions lead to outcomes. As individuals, business owners, executives, or government officials, once we look at the causal links in a coronavirus decision, we can identify the subset of data that is actually relevant. And we can build AI and other models to render that data understandable and actionable and to let us update our decisions as the pandemic changes over time. DI gives us tools and a process to answer the Covid-19 question, “what should I do?” For an example of applying DI to covid-19 decision-making, look here.
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Rescooped by Lorien Pratt from Decision Intelligence News |
In my situation, I believe that DI could have assisted me with the best action to take to achieve my ultimate goal, which is to drive engineering pride across SAP. …
While we may be facing the biggest threat of our lifetime, the good news is that Decision Intelligence (DI) can leverage AI as well as epidemiological, social, and other knowledge sources to help. Including beautiful visualizations, DI can be used by policymakers, media, business leaders and individuals, to make and communicate the impact of their decisions in a complex world.
It is time for the Covid-19 era to become the decision intelligence era. Over the past months we have seen thousands of coronavirus decisions play out around the world. Some have saved lives and prevented suffering. Others have cost lives and created misery. We are still early days in this pandemic. We can leverage DI and DI tools to improve our future decisions. Even modest improvements in the quality of decisions can prevent huge amounts of death and suffering.
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Rescooped by Lorien Pratt from Decision Intelligence News |
You have a new superpower. Your choices have ripple effects throughout the world, and you have no idea what those impacts will be. Part of the future of DI is to understand that there are systematic patterns to those impacts.
Dr. Pratt demos an immersive visualization tool that lets us see these patterns and interactions, make changes, and see immediately how these changes lead to different outcomes.
I think there are a lot of people who feel overwhelmed by information. The executives I talk with say this in particular, “I don’t want to talk with these quants; I can’t … understand a word that they say.” If they have interfaces like this [visualization tool], they will engage with the evidence, the data, and the AI …I think that the biggest initial impact will be in our sense of agency, that we will balance out the inequity that comes when technologists dominate…and send us things and make us click things and make us do things, and we start to use this for our own needs …….[greater] equality…We democratized the computer, didn’t we? Let’s democratize AI [other] complex [technologies, too].
Please enjoy this talk that I gave last January at the Institute for the Future. I believe it is more relevant today than ever.
Due to increased working from home due to COVID19, NYC residents are increasingly moving to the suburbs, driving a boom in new construction. Here's an example of one of the ways that COVID19 is changing the construction industry.