Mar 6, 2025
The Green Impact Report
Quick take: From Midwestern roots to LEED Fellow status, Kristen
Fritsch shares how sustainability becomes second nature in
architecture and how biomimicry can inspire truly innovative design
solutions.
Meet Your Fellow Sustainability Champion
Kristen (Atchity) Fritsch, AIA, LEED Fellow, WELL AP is a Senior
Associate and Director of Sustainability at Elkus Manfredi
Architects where she has been implementing initiatives related to
the AIA 2030 Commitment, healthy materials and embodied
carbon.
Her role also involves advising and assisting design teams with LEED, WELL, materials and systems research, and performance analysis such as solar mitigation and daylighting concepts.
She has led firm-wide training on sustainable design practices and the greening of office operations and practice. Outside the office she has taught design studios at the Boston Architectural College on using biomimicry in the design process and is a member of the Board of Directors for Built Environment Plus (USGBC MA). Kristen is also a member of the LEED Materials Technical Advisory Group for USGBC.
🌱Breaking Ground on Better Building
In this episode, Kristen revolutionizes traditional construction
approaches:
Key Insight #1: Sustainability as Second Nature
The Challenge: Sustainability initially treated as an add-on feature rather than an integral part of design
The Solution: Embedding sustainable thinking from project inception, making it "the way we do things"
ROI: When sustainable practices become standard, achieving LEED Gold or Platinum becomes more accessible and cost-effective
Key Insight #2: Biomimicry as Design Inspiration
The Challenge: Traditional design approaches that fail to learn from nature's 3.8 billion years of innovation
The Solution: Looking to nature for problem-solving inspiration, like self-cleaning paint inspired by lily pad cell structures
ROI: More efficient, elegant solutions that work in harmony with natural systems rather than against them
Key Insight #3: Material Reuse at Commercial Scale
The Challenge: Difficulty implementing material reuse beyond small-scale residential projects
The Solution: Developing systematic approaches to reuse furniture and materials in larger commercial projects
ROI: Reduced embodied carbon, cost savings for clients, and inspiring designs that tell a story of sustainability
Sustainable Soundbite
"The greatest thing is the thing that's already existing. So how do
we do that at a commercial scale? I think we've done it at a
residential scale or a small scale... But how do we break that and
figure out how to do it at the commercial scale?"
– Kristen Fritsch
Your Green Building Action Plan
Transform your next project with these steps:
This Week: Take inventory of what materials in your current projects could be reused or repurposed
This Quarter: Research biomimicry principles that could be applied to a current design challenge
This Year: Develop a comprehensive approach to materials selection that prioritizes health, wellness, and embodied carbon reduction
Connect & Learn More
🗒️ Read the transcript Link
🔗 Connect with Kristen Fritsch: LinkedIn
📚 Book Recommendation: "Birding to Change the World" by Trish O'Kane
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