Reprint

Environmental Impact Assessment of Buildings

Edited by
February 2020
168 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-243-2 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-244-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Environmental Impact Assessment of Buildings that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Computer Science & Mathematics
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary

This Special Issue covers a wide range of areas—including building orientation, service life, use of photocatalytically active structures and PV facades, implications of transportation system, building types (i.e., high rise, multilevel, commercial, residential), life cycle assessment, and structural engineering—that need to be considered in the environmental impact assessment of buildings, and the chapters include case studies across the globe. Consideration of these strategies would help reduce energy and material consumption, environmental emissions, and waste generation associated with all phases of a building’s life cycle. Chapter 1 demonstrates that green star concrete exhibits the same structural properties as conventional concrete in Australia. Chapter 2 showed that the use of TiO2 as a photocatalyst on the surface of construction materials with a suitable stable binding agent, such as aggregates, would enable building walls to absorb NOx from air. This study found that TiO2 has the potential to reduce ambient concentrations of NOx from areas where this pollutant becomes concentrated under solar irradiation. Chapter 3 presents the life cycle assessment of architecturally integrated glass–glass photovoltaics in building facades to find the appropriate material composition for a multicolored PV façade offering improved environmental performance. Chapter 4 shows that urban office buildings lacking appropriate orientation experienced indoor overheating. Chapter 5 details four modeling approaches that were implemented to estimate buildings’ response towards load shedding. Chapter 6 covers the life cycle GHG emissions of high-rise residential housing block to discover opportunities for environmental improvement. Chapter 7 discusses an LCA framework that took into account variation in the service life of buildings associated with the use of different types of materials. Chapter 8 presents a useful data mining algorithm to conduct life cycle asset management in residential developments built on transport systems.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
green star concrete; slag; recycled aggregate; wash water; sustainability; peak shaving; demand response; block of buildings; thermal model; TEASER; greenhouse gases; residential building; life cycle assessment; sustainable-development; life-cycle social analysis; public-engagement; modal-variability; transit-policy; work-commute; travel-satisfaction; coloured glass; life cycle assessment; building integrated photovoltaic; rain cladding; LCA; LCI; BIPV; building; environmental life cycle assessment; service life; environmental performance; environmental remediation; air pollution; photocatalytic construction materials; nitric oxides; functionalized aggregate; Multilevel buildings; indoor overheating; operational energy; shallow plan forms