A Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of the Primary Barriers to Sustainable Construction in Iran
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Demographic Characteristics of Society
2.2. Identification of Obstacles
2.3. Questionnaire Design and Data Collection
2.4. Analyze Data
2.4.1. Step 1: Statistical Description of Research Variables
2.4.2. Step 2: Examining the Assumptions of Structural Equation Modeling (Component-Oriented)
2.4.3. Step 3: Checking Sampling Adequacy
KMO Criterion and Bartlett’s Test
Kolmogorov–Smirnov Test
- The data for all the variables follow a normal distribution (H0).
- Each variable’s data do not follow a normal distribution (H1).
2.4.4. Step 4: Model-Fitting Measurements
Composite Reliability, Cronbach’s Alpha, and Convergent Validity
Assessing the Divergent Validity and Factor Loadings of the Observed Variables
2.4.5. Step 5: Fitting the Structural Model
Coefficients of Significance (T-Values), Coefficient of Predictive Power (Q2), and Coefficient of Determination (R2)
2.4.6. Step 6: General Model Desirability
2.4.7. Step 7: Examining the Intensity of the Relationship Effects of the Research Model
2.4.8. Step 8: Friedman’s Test
- n: population size (rows)
- k: quantity of groups (columns)
- RJ: The sum of the ranks in the J-th column.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Adequacy of Sampling
3.2. Kolmogorov–Smirnov Test
3.3. Convergent Validity, Composite Reliability, and Cronbach’s Alpha
3.4. Assessing the Divergent Validity and Factor Loadings of the Observed Variables
3.5. The Criterion of Coefficient of Significance (T-Values), Determination Coefficient (R2) and Predictiveness Coefficient (Q2)
3.6. The Desirability of the General Model
3.7. Analysis of the Study Model’s Impact on the Strength of the Connection
3.8. Friedman Test
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Job | Frequency | Percentage | Cumulative Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
Project manager | 18 | 15.00 | 15.00 |
Design engineer | 37 | 30.83 | 45.83 |
Site Manager | 18 | 15.00 | 60.83 |
Contractors | 47 | 39.17 | 100.00 |
All | 120 | 100 |
No. | Barriers |
---|---|
1 | Inadequate knowledge of contractors and specialized operators of green and sustainable buildings |
2 | The cheapness of energy due to allocating subsidies to it |
3 | Absence of mandated, defined requirements for developing a green building |
4 | Failing to inform and educate the public on the severe effects of climate change |
5 | Lack of sufficient knowledge of designers |
6 | Lack of demand or low demand for green buildings |
7 | Lack of advertising for green buildings |
8 | The lack of a single trustee in the field of optimizing energy consumption and the environment |
9 | Dependence on the budget of institutions related to the sale of renewable materials (conflict of interest of institutions) |
10 | Funding municipalities from environmental violations in different sectors |
11 | Inefficiency and demonstration of green designs and buildings |
12 | Lack of leading companies in the production of materials and green and sustainable technology |
13 | Risk aversion of domestic and foreign private sector investment |
14 | Lack of policy for the development of renewable and sustainable energy |
15 | The low quality of the design and construction of existing green designs |
16 | Tension in the country’s foreign policies and foreign sanctions |
17 | Uncontrollable inflation of the construction industry in Iran |
18 | Void of policy making and planning (multiplicity and inconsistencies of law-making institutions) |
19 | Lack of green and sustainable business plan and financial losses due to lack of experience and planning |
20 | Lack or poor management of waste and material recycling |
21 | Lack of sufficient manufacturing technology |
22 | Lack of legal framework to encourage investment |
23 | Lack of manpower training in standardization and maintenance of green buildings |
24 | Immature green materials market |
25 | Lack of knowledge and awareness of the existing situation by the beneficiaries |
Symbol | Obstacles | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | CKT (Construction—Knowledge and Technology) | Restriction related to knowledge and Technology | Inadequate knowledge of designers, contractors and specialized implementers of green and sustainable buildings |
Lack of leading companies in the production of materials and green and sustainable technology | |||
Lack of information and awareness about the operation, maintenance, repair, and rebuilding of green buildings | |||
Insufficient training of personnel in the area of sustainable building | |||
2 | CSC (Construction—Social Cultural) | Social cultural restrictions | People’s denial of the severe effects of climate change |
No or low demand for green buildings | |||
Lack of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) | |||
3 | CEI (Construction—Economic and Investment) | Economic and investment restrictions | Risk of investment |
The conflict of interests of institutions with the development of green construction (Gaining income of the Ministry of Oil and Energy from sales Energy and municipalities and the environment from crimes) | |||
High initial cost | |||
4 | CMM (Construction—Management and Marketing) | Restriction of management and marketing | Lack of advertising and proper marketing for green buildings |
Lack of cooperation and partnership between organizations Related (engineering system, environmental organization and municipality) | |||
Lack of roadmap and long-term planning in relation to green construction | |||
Lack of circular economy system approach instead of traditional linear economy approach (3R = Reduce, Recycle, Reuse) | |||
Insufficient knowledge of how green construction performs in relation to regional weather and geography | |||
5 | CP (Construction—Political) | Political restrictions | Sanctions |
Political instability | |||
6 | CL (Construction—Legalisation) | Legal restriction | Absence of statutory standards for constructing green building |
Inadequate government assistance for the creation of environmentally friendly buildings | |||
Lack of proper policy to prevent waste of water and energy | |||
Lack of incentives and punishments for Green construction | |||
Absence of local criteria and framework for regular review of sustainable building |
Dimensions | No. Questions | Average | Standard Deviation |
---|---|---|---|
CKT | 4 | 3.958 | 0.597 |
CSC | 3 | 3.880 | 1.020 |
CEI | 3 | 3.683 | 0.97 |
CL | 5 | 4.011 | 0.866 |
CP | 2 | 4.083 | 0.882 |
CMM | 5 | 3.753 | 0.961 |
SCBS (Sustainable Construction Barriers) | 1 | 4.266 | 1.135 |
Dimension | KMO Test | Bartlett’s Test |
---|---|---|
CKT | 0.692 | Sig = 0.000 |
CSC | ||
CEI | ||
CL | ||
CP | ||
CMM | ||
SCBS |
Dimensions | Kolmogorov–Smirnov | Significance Level |
---|---|---|
CKT | 1.885 | 0.002 |
CSC | 2.057 | 0.000 |
CEI | 1.726 | 0.005 |
CL | 1.482 | 0.025 |
CP | 3.085 | 0.000 |
CMM | 1.308 | 0.065 |
SCBS | 3.824 | 0.000 |
Hidden Variables | Cronbach’s Alpha Coefficients (Alpha ≥ 0.7) | Composite Reliability Coefficient (CR ≥ 0.7) | Mean Variance Extracted (AVE ≥ 0.5) |
---|---|---|---|
CEI | 0.794 | 0.880 | 0.711 |
CKT | 0.700 | 0.770 | 0.500 |
CL | 0.859 | 0.899 | 0.643 |
CMM | 0.882 | 0.914 | 0.683 |
CP | 0.711 | 0.873 | 0.775 |
CSC | 0.853 | 0.912 | 0.775 |
SCBS | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
Latent Variables | Manifest Variables | Factor Loadings | t-Value |
---|---|---|---|
CKT | Q1 | 0.456 | 2.301 |
Q2 | 0.870 | 34.299 | |
Q3 | 0.580 | 4.198 | |
Q4 | 0.759 | 10.945 | |
CSC | Q5 | 0.822 | 20.840 |
Q6 | 0.914 | 69.143 | |
Q7 | 0.902 | 39.697 | |
CEI | Q8 | 0.887 | 31.139 |
Q9 | 0.849 | 11.914 | |
Q10 | 0.739 | 53.724 | |
CL | Q11 | 0.895 | 65.598 |
Q12 | 0.841 | 17.366 | |
Q13 | 0.798 | 30.191 | |
Q14 | 0.634 | 6.324 | |
Q15 | 0.817 | 14.253 | |
CP | Q16 | 0.684 | 22.688 |
Q17 | 0.897 | 37.026 | |
CMM | Q18 | 0.866 | 35.500 |
Q19 | 0.882 | 30.734 | |
Q20 | 0.809 | 19.667 | |
Q21 | 0.685 | 10.570 | |
Q22 | 0.873 | 61.291 | |
SCBS | Q23 | 1.000 | 0.000 |
Structure | CEI | CKT | CL | CMM | CP | CSC | SCBS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CEI | 0.834 | ||||||
CKT | 0.559 | 0.685 | |||||
CL | 0.759 | 0.523 | 0.802 | ||||
CMM | 0.771 | 0.600 | 0.796 | 0.826 | |||
CP | 0.617 | 0.534 | 0.750 | 0.734 | 0.880 | ||
CSC | 0.798 | 0.604 | 0.789 | 0.669 | 0.749 | 0.880 | |
SCBS | 0.773 | 0.671 | 0.595 | 0.774 | 0.647 | 0.707 | 1.000 |
Row | Dimensions | Values (R2) |
---|---|---|
1 | CEI | 0.598 |
2 | CKT | 0.450 |
3 | CL | 0.801 |
4 | CMM | 0.599 |
5 | CP | 0.418 |
6 | CSC | 0.500 |
Row | Dimension | Values (Q2) |
---|---|---|
1 | CEI | 0.407 |
2 | CKT | 0.181 |
3 | CL | 0.455 |
4 | CMM | 0.504 |
5 | CP | 0.304 |
6 | CSC | 0.498 |
Relationships between Variables | Direct Effects | ||
---|---|---|---|
Relationship 1 | SCBS ← CKT | ||
Path coefficient: 0.671 | Significance coefficient: 16.232 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Relationship 2 | SCBS ← CSC | ||
Path coefficient: 0.707 | Significance coefficient: 10.889 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Relationship 3 | SCBS ← CEI | ||
Path coefficient: 0.773 | Significance coefficient: 17.145 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Relationship 4 | SCBS ← CL | ||
Path coefficient: 0.895 | Significance coefficient: 65.598 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Relationship 5 | SCBS ← CP | ||
Path coefficient: 0.647 | Significance coefficient: 7.520 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Relationship 6 | SCBS ← CMM | ||
Path coefficient: 0.774 | Significance coefficient: 16.308 | Relationship type: direct | Result: approved |
Dimension | Average Rank | Sig. | Degrees of Freedom | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|
Restriction related to knowledge and Technology (CKT) | 3.36 | 0.000 | 5 | 4 |
Social cultural Constraints (CSC) | 3.66 | 3 | ||
Economic and investment restrictions | 2.65 | 6 | ||
Legal Limit (CL) | 4.24 | 1 | ||
Political restrictions (CP) | 4.06 | 2 | ||
Restriction of management and marketing (CMM) | 3.03 | 5 |
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Kamranfar, S.; Damirchi, F.; Pourvaziri, M.; Abdunabi Xalikovich, P.; Mahmoudkelayeh, S.; Moezzi, R.; Vadiee, A. A Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of the Primary Barriers to Sustainable Construction in Iran. Sustainability 2023, 15, 13762. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151813762
Kamranfar S, Damirchi F, Pourvaziri M, Abdunabi Xalikovich P, Mahmoudkelayeh S, Moezzi R, Vadiee A. A Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of the Primary Barriers to Sustainable Construction in Iran. Sustainability. 2023; 15(18):13762. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151813762
Chicago/Turabian StyleKamranfar, Saeed, Farid Damirchi, Mitra Pourvaziri, Pardayev Abdunabi Xalikovich, Samira Mahmoudkelayeh, Reza Moezzi, and Amir Vadiee. 2023. "A Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of the Primary Barriers to Sustainable Construction in Iran" Sustainability 15, no. 18: 13762. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151813762
APA StyleKamranfar, S., Damirchi, F., Pourvaziri, M., Abdunabi Xalikovich, P., Mahmoudkelayeh, S., Moezzi, R., & Vadiee, A. (2023). A Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling Analysis of the Primary Barriers to Sustainable Construction in Iran. Sustainability, 15(18), 13762. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151813762