Interview with DSSR Sustainability Specialist, Rachel Mason
1 March 2022
Interview with DSSR Sustainability Specialist, Rachel Mason
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Rachel Mason, a Sustainability Specialist with DSSR, was recently interviewed by travelling photography studio, LAPORTRA.
This follows from his achievements last year, namely becoming an Incorporated Engineer (IEng), a member of CIBSE (MCIBSE), and becoming an Authorised Person for Medical Gas Pipeline Systems HTM 02-01 (APMGPS).
DSSR displays a strong commitment to skills and training, including those in Traineeships and Apprenticeships. DSSR regularly employs trainees from school and supports them through College and University, from NQ’s and HNC’s to Masters Degrees.
This support for young engineers is extended to those still in school, as every year DSSR brings on Summer Placements and internships into each of its offices.
DSSR actively participates in training events in schools; we are also STEM Ambassadors, encouraging students to consider further study of STEM subjects and progression into related careers, inspiring the next generation of STEM professionals.
“If you’re going to design buildings that are fit for purpose and that are going to stand the test of time, and are correct for each individual occupant or client – you need to consider sustainability.”
Rachel: My job title is Sustainability Specialist, however, the role itself is not strictly limited to sustainability and is actually quite varied. I work for DSSR, an engineering consultancy, so the main aim of my role is to advise DSSR’s clients and our design teams on a wide range of sustainability issues within the built environment.
Some people automatically consider ‘challenges’ a bad thing; for me, the core of my job is constantly dealing with new challenges, but I have always considered it a positive thing that I get to tackle unique sustainability issues across a broad range of projects.
Part of my role is being a BREEAM Assessor, which is a certification scheme for new buildings that sets benchmarks for standard categories of development (e.g. commercial buildings, offices, schools). To perform this role, it is essential to be involved from the very beginning. Sustainability can cover everything and anything from waste to the materials used in the building, so my priority is to have early engagement with the design team to find bespoke solutions which are correct for each building.
Each project is very different, each site is unique, and so their challenges require bespoke solutions which are specifically tailored to the situation. From a sustainability perspective, my priority is to work closely with the design team—getting them on board and really engaging them—in order to ensure sustainability challenges are considered from the earliest design stage.
Defined by the Brundtland Commission as ‘meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, sustainability relates to everything.
For a building to be designed well, it really needs to consider sustainability. However, despite its crucial importance, the topic of sustainability is poorly understood, which can lead to it being framed as an ‘eco add-on’. That being said, I think increasingly people are seeing that climate change is affecting us more and more, with increased visibility in the news of flooding, food shortages, and rising temperatures. The consequences of unsustainable practices have become ever more apparent.
To frame the importance of sustainability within the construction industry, it helps to consider that the built environment accounts for 45% of total UK carbon emissions—with 32% of landfill waste coming from the construction and demolition of buildings.
Currently, there is a big push to focus on significantly reducing carbon emissions through sustainable practices—such as the ‘Net-Zero Carbon’ target set by the Scottish Government—and we really need to get there.
I have seen projects which haven’t focused on sustainability, and I have seen the consequences of that approach. Some projects are money-driven, rushed across the line into occupancy in order to achieve a quick turnaround. However, in addition to the negative impact on the environment caused by this kind of approach, the resulting structure is far more likely to be of a lower quality than one which considers sustainability.
When sustainability is integrated into the design and build process, you’re designing a building that has less of a negative impact on the environment in the short term and will stand the test of time in the long term. Occupants within a considered environment are generally going to be a lot happier and more comfortable, benefiting from better air quality, comfortable ambient temperatures, increased natural light – they are simply going to have a much nicer environment, which will increase productivity.
It’s not necessarily ‘business advice’, as just good life advice: always keep an open mind. If you truly want to achieve something—if you work hard enough and keep an open mind—you will often find a way to achieve it.
Quite often, you will come up against negativity, and people who are, for one reason or another, resistant to what you are trying to do. The best thing you can do when faced with a challenge like that is to adapt, innovate, and keep finding a new way of doing things.
“It is a really exciting time to be working within this sector, with sustainability and the importance of responsible practices in the public eye like never before. The effects of climate change are terrible, affecting us all, and we all have a part to play in that—I’m just glad that my job is focused on that.”
Personally, I am glad that DSSR appreciates that sustainability is not a stand-alone or begrudgingly tacked-on element within the design process. It requires a holistic approach, starting at the beginning, building from the ground up, looking at the options available, and making bespoke solutions. Whether you’re building a school or assisting a contractor at the construction stage, a successful project will integrate sustainability throughout its design, construction, and operation.
That’s what I probably enjoy most about my job. No two days are the same; I could be involved at the very beginning of a project, working with the architects to do calculations to and design a bespoke energy strategy, or I could be way down the line, helping a contractor at the handover stage to manage their construction waste, or helping to pick the right building materials from the correct suppliers.