Bahnfleth Environmental Health Award honors professor, spans generations

4/24/2019

KANSAS CITY, Missouri — A determination to improve people’s health and productivity through improved indoor environmental quality (IEQ) isn’t the only thing William P. Bahnfleth, professor of architectural engineering at Penn State, shared with his late father, Donald.

Both studied at the University of Illinois, both had careers that included academic appointments and professional practice, and both served as presidents of ASHRAE (formerly, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-conditioning Engineers), who is bestowing the 2019 Donald Bahnfleth Environmental Health Award to his son.

“We both believed that the primary purpose of buildings is to serve the needs of the people inside,” William Bahnfleth said. “We can design buildings to save energy and reduce environmental impact, but a building that delivers poor IEQ that affects well-being is a failure.”

The Environmental Health Award, initiated in 2006, was renamed in 2019 to honor Donald’s memory and his central role initiating ASHRAE’s environmental health activities during his presidency in 1985-86 through the creation of the Environmental Health Committee (EHC). It recognizes excellence in volunteer service focused on environmental health issues, which allows ASHRAE to contribute technological advances for the benefit of industry and public.

As the 2019 recipient, William Bahnfleth is being recognized for his service, including terms on the EHC, twice serving as chair of the ASHRAE IAQ (indoor air quality) conference, and authoring papers and articles for ASHRAE related to environmental health.

“My father was an advocate for indoor environmental quality when it was an emerging concern of the construction industry,” William Bahnfleth said. “I wasn’t aware of it at the time, so when I later became interested in IEQ as a research area and an advocate for it through my ASHRAE leadership role, it was surprising to learn how much he had done nearly 30 years earlier.”

He added, “His statements from that time show that he saw the public health impact of buildings as one of the most important emerging issues in architectural engineering, even though he also was a proponent of energy efficiency. He was way ahead of his time in that regard.”

Bahnfleth will receive the award at the ASHRAE Annual Conference in Kansas City on June 22. “My dad was tremendously proud of what I accomplished in ASHRAE and my career and I’m proud to be the first recipient of this award renamed in his honor,” he said.

 

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MEDIA CONTACT:

Erin Cassidy Hendrick

emc5045@psu.edu

william bahnfleth

William Bahnfleth

“My dad was tremendously proud of what I accomplished in ASHRAE and my career and I’m proud to be the first recipient of this award renamed in his honor.”
—William Bahnfleth

 
 

About

Globally recognized as a leading architectural engineering department, the mission of the Department of Architectural Engineering at Penn State is to advance the built environment through the development of world-class architectural engineers and research. The vision of the Department of Architectural Engineering at Penn State is to lead the world in innovative education and research to achieve high-performing built environments. Our program emphasizes the scientific and engineering aspects of planning, designing, and constructing buildings, providing our architectural engineering graduates with outstanding education and research opportunities. 

Department of Architectural Engineering

104 Engineering Unit A

The Pennsylvania State University

University Park, PA 16802

Phone: 814-865-6394