Environmental certifications: a benchmark for designing sustainable acoustic projects

In a construction project, environmental certifications have become essential. They guide technical choices and structure environmental objectives.

But what is an environmental certification in the building sector?
An environmental certification is a framework used to assess the performance of a building, a product, or an industrial process based on criteria such as energy, materials, and occupant comfort.

Between ISO standards, FDES, LCA, and labels such as HQE®, LEED® and BREEAM®, their role is still often misunderstood. They do not all cover the same aspects, and their impact on a project is not always clear.

Hall intérieur avec plafond acoustique blanc à lames et éclairage encastré, surplombant un espace ouvert végétalisé.

Increasingly structuring environmental requirements

Today, a building project must integrate several dimensions:

  • reducing environmental impact
  • energy performance
  • indoor air quality
  • occupant comfort, particularly acoustic comfort

Certifications provide a framework to assess these criteria. However, it is still necessary to understand what they actually measure.

Three levels of certification to understand

Not all environmental certifications assess the same aspects. They can be grouped into three categories.

 

Company certifications: the production framework

ISO 14001 and ISO 50001 standards apply to industrial sites.

  • ISO 14001 governs the management of environmental impacts
  • ISO 50001 aims to improve energy performance

They ensure how products are manufactured, not their performance.

 

LCA and FDES: product impact 

Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) measures the impact of a product across its entire lifecycle:

  • raw materials
  • manufacturing
  • transport
  • use
  • end of life

This data is available in FDES, which are used in building environmental calculations.

They make it possible to compare products and integrate their impact into a project.

 

 

 

Circular life cycle assessment (LCA) diagram showing five stages of a construction product: Raw Materials, Manufacturing, Transportation, Use, and End of Life, connected by arrows in a continuous cycle.

Building certifications: overall project performance

Frameworks such as HQE®, LEED® and BREEAM® assess a building as a whole.

They include various criteria:

  • energy
  • materials
  • comfort
  • indoor air quality

It is not the product that is certified, but the building. Materials simply contribute to the final result.

The integration of certifications into Eurocoustic solutions

Eurocoustic offers acoustic solutions with environmental data (FDES) designed to contribute to building certification criteria such as HQE®, LEED® or BREEAM®.

 

Controlled industrial processes

Production relies on certified management systems, ensuring:

  • controlled management of environmental impacts related to production (energy, resources, waste)
  • continuous improvement of practices

 

Actionable environmental data

Products come with FDES, used in Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) calculations.

They make it possible to:

  • quantify their environmental impact
  • compare them with other solutions

A contribution to the objectives of certified projects

Acoustic ceilings contribute to several criteria:

  • acoustic comfort
  • indoor air quality
  • material selection

Concrete benefits for projects

The use of products with FDES and certifications makes it possible to:

  • facilitate environmental calculations
  • verify compatibility with certification frameworks (HQE, LEED, BREEAM)
  • improve certain measured performances (acoustics, IAQ)

A practical application in commercial spaces

In a certified project, acoustic ceilings contribute to:

  • improving speech intelligibility
  • reducing reverberation
  • maintaining good indoor air quality
Salle de réunion moderne avec plafond acoustique à lames, murs verts et tables disposées en U.

Certifications to support better decision-making

Environmental certifications help provide a clearer understanding of a project, provided that distinctions are made between:

  • production (ISO)
  • products (FDES, LCA)
  • the building (HQE, LEED, BREEAM)

In an acoustic project, they are mainly used to compare products and to check whether they meet the project requirements.