Eco-Cultural Design Assessment Framework and Tool for Sustainable Housing Schemes
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Background
1.1. Eco-Cultural Sustainability and Its Assessment
1.2. Eco-Cultural Architecture Approach and Considerations
- There is a bias in building sustainability frameworks and assessment tools toward physical building performance indicators;
- Established cultural sustainability-related indicators are limited;
- This points to a gap in neglecting the importance of socio-cultural indicators for developing context responsive, sustainable housing [40].
2. Eco-Cultural Design Tool
2.1. Development
- A critical review of recent literature on sustainability, vernacular architecture and building sustainability assessment methods to understand research gaps and map the Eco-cultural tangible and intangible design indicators;
- In addition to documentary, survey and observational data, the primary data included 81 semi-structured interviews with inhabitants of residential dwellings of various typologies from two case study areas in Jordan. The two case studies were a pilot phase of modern housing development of King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz in Zarqa city and vernacular housing in the old centre of As-Salt city;
- Data gathered from the case studies were subject to rounds of coding and thematic analysis. Results from the fieldwork stage were used to refine the conceptual framework and to define the tangible spatial metrics and procedural guides within the proposed Eco-cultural design tool.
- The study found that residents and users have a different perception of sustainability from that available in most sustainability assessment frameworks and indicators;
- Results showed that indicators related to wellbeing and local culture were the most discussed by participants and were associated with sustainable architecture;
- It was also found that most sustainable building assessment frameworks and methods only focus on physical environmental indicators and have neglected socio-cultural ones;
- Jordan has unique sustainability and built environment challenges due to context-related issues which affected the final list of Eco-cultural indicators;
- The study revealed additional sustainability indicators not available in the Jordanian Green Guide for sustainable dwellings design;
- Better user satisfaction and wellbeing will help to improve the sustainability of housing schemes. For example, it could prevent any unplanned or timely changes in the dwelling layout or structure that could affect its thermal comfort or energy efficiency.
2.2. Structure and Components
- Negative practice subtracts (−3) points from the total score (lowest);
- Minimum practice awards no points (0) to the total score;
- Good practice awards 3 points to the total score;
- Best practice awards 5 points to the total score (highest).
3. User Evaluation and Testing of the Eco-Cultural Tool
- (a)
- Effectiveness: to what extent the tool accurately presents solutions that are useful in achieving its objectives;
- (b)
- Efficiency: deals with the utility factors of time and effort expended to achieve the objectives;
- (c)
- Satisfaction: considers the acceptability of the tool’s content by users.
3.1. Participant Sampling
3.2. Data Collection
- What is missing from the tool?
- What components of the tool are not necessary?
- Are there any other errors or problems that need to be addressed?
- What, if anything, did you like about the tool, and what did you dislike?
- Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the tool?
- Do you have anything else to say or add?
3.3. Data-Analysis
4. Results
4.1. User Evaluation and Ease of Use
4.2. Content and Structure Evaluation
4.2.1. Absent Elements
4.2.2. Unwanted Elements
4.2.3. Errors and Confusions
4.2.4. Strengths
5. Discussion
5.1. Content and Acceptability of the Tool
5.1.1. Site and Context (Formally Site Sustainability)
5.1.2. Social Relationships
5.1.3. Cultural and Perceptual
5.1.4. Indoor Comfortable Environment
5.1.5. Flexibility and Adaptability
5.1.6. Energy and Materials
5.2. Improvements
6. Conclusions
- (a)
- Effectiveness: Participants praised the context-based approach toward sustainability and agreed that the current assessment methods were not entirely suitable for Jordan in their current form. Participants also commended the use of socio-cultural indicators as a design moderator and as the right way for the consideration of specific residents’ needs within the sustainable built environment;
- (b)
- Efficiency: Participants expressed that the tool allowed them to think dynamically with multidimensional constraints rather than traditional methods that focused on a single design solution;
- (c)
- Satisfaction: Most participants had positive feedback about the tool content. However, they were less satisfied with the usability and design of the tool.
- In general terms, the participants praised the effort to make a contextual green building assessment tool for Jordan that is not based on international green building rating systems such as LEED.
- Some participants said the main barrier against implementing some of the criteria is the economic burden that the developer might face. The increase in construction and design costs would limit developers and investors from following some of the metrics.
- Participants said that the tool should provide more economic-related indicators that could relate to both developers’ and residents’ needs.
- Participants expressed that it would be better if the tool were more graphical, quoting that “architects are visual thinkers”, or more interactive, with a web-based design and a more interactive interface.
- Participants suggested adding an index page along the tool pages to help guide the users and show their progress.
- Participants enjoyed using the provided in-tool calculators that could help measure the degree of achievement of metrics. They suggested that the absence of the equations and calculations in the tool and in similar existing tools needs to be addressed.
- There was a consensus among participants that there should be various versions of the tool that are targeted at other stakeholders such as project developers and investors.
- There were concerns by some participants that the impact of the context section had repeated ideas or indicators that overlapped with other sections. This tab was removed from the updated version, and its sub-categories were relocated to other sections.
- Participants supported the pre-chosen indicators, and all of the pre-selected indicators were preserved within the category.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Assessment Tool | Available Socio-Cultural Indicators | Number of Indicators | Weight of Points |
---|---|---|---|
BREEAM-Communities | Demographic needs and priorities. Housing provision. Delivery of services, facilities and amenities. Public realm. Safety and walkability. Access to public transport. Local vernacular. Inclusive design. Community management. | 9 | 28 |
LEED-(Neighbourhood Design) | Housing and job proximity. Compact and mixed-use development. Access to transit. Walkable streets. Neighbourhood schools. Connection and open community. Tree-lined and shaded streetscapes. Housing type and affordability. Access to civic and public space. Access to recreation facilities. Visibility and universal design. Community outreach and involvement. | 15 | 46 |
CASBEE-(Urban Design) | Access to amenities, facilities and parks. Transportation. Safety and security and crime prevention. Cultural and educational facilities. Access to health and commercial facilities. Quality of housing. Management of the local society. | 7 | N/A |
SBTool (Sustainable Building Tool) | Universal access on-site and within the building. Access to direct sunlight from living areas of dwelling units. Visual privacy in principal areas of dwelling units. Access to private open space from dwelling units. Involvement of residents in project management. Compatibility of urban design with local cultural values. Provision of public open space compatible with local cultural values. Impact of the design on existing streetscapes. Use of traditional local materials and techniques. Maintenance of the heritage value of the exterior of an existing facility. Maintenance of the heritage value of the interior of an existing facility. Impact of tall structure(s) on existing view corridors. Quality of views from tall structures. Perceptual quality of site development. Aesthetic quality of facility exterior. Aesthetic quality of facility interior. Access to exterior views from interior. | 19 | 22 |
Jordan Green Building Guide (JGBG) | Project aesthetics. Project landscaping. Social connection. Transportation. Provision of open spaces. | 5 | 11 |
The Tool’s Main and Sub-Categories | Missing Indicator | Adapted Indicators |
---|---|---|
1. Site and context | ||
Flood risk | ✓ | |
Use of vegetation to provide ambient outdoor cooling | ✓ | |
Shading of building(s) by deciduous trees | ✓ | |
Urban heat island effect | ✓ | |
2. Social Relationships | ||
Overlooking dwellings | ✓ | |
Walkable streets and pathways | ✓ | |
Proximity to services | ✓ | |
Provision of public open space(s) | ✓ | |
3. Cultural and perceptual | ||
Visual privacy in principal areas of dwelling units | ✓ | |
Project aesthetic | ✓ | |
Relevance to vernacular architecture | ✓ | |
Access to a private open space | ✓ | |
Access to exterior views | ✓ | |
4. Flexibility and adaptability | ||
Potential for horizontal or vertical space modification | ✓ | |
Maintenance of building components | ✓ | |
Adaptability to add renewable energy sources | ✓ | |
Potential for Internal space modification | ✓ | |
5. Indoor comfortable environment | ||
Effectiveness of functionality and Internal circulation | ✓ | |
Appropriate Ventilation in primary occupancy areas | ✓ | |
Appropriate daylighting in primary occupancy areas | ✓ | |
Noise and Acoustics control | ✓ | |
6. Energy and resources efficiency | ||
Building orientation | ✓ | |
Building envelope | ✓ | |
Shading device | ✓ | |
Use of local materials and techniques | ✓ | |
Rainwater harvest and management | ✓ | |
7. Impact on context | ||
Solar access | ✓ | |
Density and crowdedness (number of dwelling) | ✓ | |
Density and crowdedness (Spaces and setbacks between buildings) | ✓ | |
Typology and massing | ✓ |
Number Sampled | 38 |
Gender | |
Male | 16 |
Female | 22 |
Age | |
25–34 | 8 |
35–44 | 12 |
45–54 | 12 |
55 and more | 6 |
Years of Experience | |
5–9 | 4 |
10–14 | 8 |
15–19 | 6 |
20–24 | 10 |
25 and more | 10 |
Education Level | |
Bachelor’s degree | 21 |
Master’s degree | 13 |
Ph.D. | 4 |
Field of Expertise | |
Dwellings and housing design | 17 |
Regional and vernacular architecture | 10 |
Sustainable architecture | 7 |
Other | 4 |
Accuracy and Effectiveness of the Tool | Efficiency and Utility of the Tool |
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Main Findings and Issue | Actioned Modifications |
---|---|
Need for more Clarifications | Expanding the introduction and user guide sections. Pictures and examples have been added to the guide tab. Tabs on Excel now have colours to differentiate them from each other (blue for introductory section, yellow for assessment sections and red for summary sheet). |
Need for a “content table” | The addition of a content table. This section also functions as a completion and progress checklist. |
Structure | Criteria now are divided into criteria for a multi or single dwelling. Moreover, criteria are also divided into those being assessed by the architect/designer or those assessed by the owner/developer of the project. |
Simplifications | Simplifications and adjustments to language throughout the tool. Most criteria are turned into either calculated or estimated percentages to unify the metric throughout the tool and present quantifiable rigorous metrics for assessment. |
Terminology and glossary | Attach an appendix of all the terms used in the tool in both English and Arabic. |
Reduce the density of the tool. | Background information and references are relocated to the end of the tool. |
Changes to assessment criteria | Participants highlighted some needed alteration to assessment criteria to better suit the context of architectural practice in Jordan. |
Need for more supplementary material | Adding a new section that defines and introduces various Eco-cultural strategies, architectural elements and metrics contained within the tool present an appendix with case studies and precedents of these Eco-cultural metrics. |
Some calculation was hard for some participants | There are links to an in-tool calculator where participants can fill variables and obtain the required calculated value for some sections. |
Overlapping | Overlaps will not be fully addressed due to the overlapping nature of Eco-cultural sustainability. Some participants felt that there is a conflict between the criteria in context and neighbour tab and between other sections. They also thought that this section as a stand-alone section was not required. So this section was removed and its sub-categories merged with other sections. |
Fix issues of usability and ease of use | The tool needs to be made interactive by developing a web-based format in which categories, sub-categories and indicators are interlinked to make it easier and simpler to use. |
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Qtaishat, Y.; Adeyeye, K.; Emmitt, S. Eco-Cultural Design Assessment Framework and Tool for Sustainable Housing Schemes. Urban Sci. 2020, 4, 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci4040065
Qtaishat Y, Adeyeye K, Emmitt S. Eco-Cultural Design Assessment Framework and Tool for Sustainable Housing Schemes. Urban Science. 2020; 4(4):65. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci4040065
Chicago/Turabian StyleQtaishat, Yahya, Kemi Adeyeye, and Stephen Emmitt. 2020. "Eco-Cultural Design Assessment Framework and Tool for Sustainable Housing Schemes" Urban Science 4, no. 4: 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci4040065
APA StyleQtaishat, Y., Adeyeye, K., & Emmitt, S. (2020). Eco-Cultural Design Assessment Framework and Tool for Sustainable Housing Schemes. Urban Science, 4(4), 65. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci4040065