Fiona Cousins, a mechanical engineer by training, is the Americas Chair for Arup. She guides a 1,900-person engineering, design, consulting, and planning team with a focus on collaborating and innovating to shape a better world.
As a longtime leader in the field, Fiona has a keen perspective on the arc of progress. She says that the market transformation that has occurred in the past 30 years means that it feels a bit less like a movement now. “The floor has been raised, through codes and other policy and market work,” she says. “Buildings have to work harder now. But at the leading edge, it still feels a bit like a movement. And now we are asking harder questions, such as: What does it mean for a building to have a biodiversity net gain?”
As for what’s next, Fiona is inspired by growing dialogue around water, both as a human rights issue and a technical issue. “I think this topic is far more visceral to people than questions of energy or carbon ever can be,” she says. “And I think it could be a topic that really connects us to the subject of planetary boundaries in a meaningful, actionable way.”