| CPTED |
Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design. AGS names three opportunities: natural access control, natural surveillance, and territorial reinforcement, with maintenance and activity support as supporting concepts. Applied at site, building, and neighbourhood scale. |
Section 1, sub-categories 2.1-2.3 |
| Solar altitude |
The vertical angle of the sun above the horizon, measured in degrees. Zero at sunrise and sunset, maximum at solar noon. Used with azimuth to precisely locate the sun in a solar path diagram. |
Section 1, site analysis |
| Solar azimuth |
The horizontal angle of the sun, which AGS measures from due south: an azimuth of 0 degrees means due south, with readings running east of south in the morning and west of south in the afternoon. Used alongside altitude for shading design and solar orientation decisions. |
Section 1, site analysis |
| Passive design |
Strategies that use building form, orientation, mass, and openings to manage heating, cooling, and daylighting without active mechanical systems. Examples: south-facing glazing for winter solar gain; roof overhangs for summer shading; thermal mass to store heat. |
Section 1; Section 3, sustainable design literacy |
| Universal design |
A design process that aims to make products and environments usable by the widest possible range of people without adaptation. Defined by Ron Mace in 1985. Broader than accessible design, which targets a specific code threshold. |
Section 2, sub-category 5.11 |
| Accessible design |
Design that meets the technical criteria of an accessibility code. AGS follows ANSI A117.1 and ADA Standards. The Canadian authority is NBC 2020 Section 3.8 and provincial accessibility legislation. Confirm all dimensions in the NBC before writing them as exam answers. |
Section 2, sub-category 5.12 |
| MasterFormat |
The CSI/CSC classification system for construction specifications, organized by work result. Divisions 00 through 49. Division 00: Procurement and Contracting Requirements. Division 01: General Requirements. Divisions 02-49: technical work by trade and material. |
Section 3, sub-categories 8.4 and 8.5 |
| UniFormat |
The CSI/CSC classification system for building elements, organized by physical assembly. Level 1: A Substructure, B Shell, C Interiors, D Services, E Equipment and Furnishings, F Special Construction, G Site Work. Primary use: elemental cost estimating at schematic design. |
Section 3, sub-categories 8.4 and 8.5; Section 1, cost management |
| SectionFormat |
The standardized three-part internal structure of a specification section: Part 1 General (scope, submittals, quality assurance, project conditions), Part 2 Products (materials, fabrication, source quality), Part 3 Execution (installation, field quality control, cleaning, closeout). |
Section 3, sub-category 8.5 |
| OmniClass |
An industry-wide classification system integrating MasterFormat, UniFormat, and 13 other tables covering disciplines, phases, properties, and tools. Used for BIM object classification and cross-software data exchange in facility management. |
Section 3, sub-category 8.4 |
| BIM |
Building Information Modelling. A workflow in which a coordinated 3D model carries geometry, material properties, and data. Changes in the model propagate automatically to all views and schedules, eliminating the manual cross-referencing required in CAD. AGS frames BIM as a workflow change, not just a software change. |
Section 3, sub-category 8.4 |
| Anthropometric data |
Quantitative body measurements (heights, reach distances, clearance envelopes) used to size spaces, fixtures, and routes for a range of users. The basis for accessible design dimensions in AGS and for universal design applications. |
Section 2, sub-categories 5.11-5.12 |