Environmental indicators for building design

The ultimate goal of building and construction – in relation to environmental issues – is to construct in an environmentally neutral way; or, as the Brundtland Report states, to consume in such a way that our children have the same choices that we have. Construction will always be needed, and will a...

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Tác giả chính: Santin, Olivia Guerra
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: IOS Press 2013
Truy cập trực tuyến:http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35061
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
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spelling oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-350612014-01-20T00:15:35Z Environmental indicators for building design Santin, Olivia Guerra The ultimate goal of building and construction – in relation to environmental issues – is to construct in an environmentally neutral way; or, as the Brundtland Report states, to consume in such a way that our children have the same choices that we have. Construction will always be needed, and will always consume resources. But in accordance with the conditions of the Brundtland Report, we should move construction into a direction that does not deplete resources, and does not worsen living circumstances through harmful indoor or outdoor environmental effects. Improving our efficiency in resource consumption is the only way in which we will be able to continue our current way of life. It has been calculated that in order to (only) maintain the world average lifestyle a factor 4 of improvement in efficiency of resource consumption is necessary, based on global resource availability, effects on climate change, and coping with growing welfare for developing countries. Measuring a factor x improvement heavily relates to the chosen benchmark. Building activities will always require some environmental load: the mere fact of living already implies use of earthbound resources, so it is generally not very efficient to calculate emissions and other effects in an absolute way. The ultimate target is not to avoid resource use at all, but to use only “reproductive resources” (“regrowable, renewable and replaceable”) to create a balanced situation. When this is achieved, we will still use resources, but usage will be sustainable: it can be maintained well into the future. In developing an approach for assessing sustainable building, the Three Step Strategy (in the Netherlands named Trias Ecologica) has proven to be useful. This publication takes a detailed look at this Strategy. 2013-08-13T07:52:13Z 2013-08-13T07:52:13Z 2008 Book | 978-1-60750-358-3 http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35061 en application/pdf IOS Press
institution Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
collection Thư viện số
language English
description The ultimate goal of building and construction – in relation to environmental issues – is to construct in an environmentally neutral way; or, as the Brundtland Report states, to consume in such a way that our children have the same choices that we have. Construction will always be needed, and will always consume resources. But in accordance with the conditions of the Brundtland Report, we should move construction into a direction that does not deplete resources, and does not worsen living circumstances through harmful indoor or outdoor environmental effects. Improving our efficiency in resource consumption is the only way in which we will be able to continue our current way of life. It has been calculated that in order to (only) maintain the world average lifestyle a factor 4 of improvement in efficiency of resource consumption is necessary, based on global resource availability, effects on climate change, and coping with growing welfare for developing countries. Measuring a factor x improvement heavily relates to the chosen benchmark. Building activities will always require some environmental load: the mere fact of living already implies use of earthbound resources, so it is generally not very efficient to calculate emissions and other effects in an absolute way. The ultimate target is not to avoid resource use at all, but to use only “reproductive resources” (“regrowable, renewable and replaceable”) to create a balanced situation. When this is achieved, we will still use resources, but usage will be sustainable: it can be maintained well into the future. In developing an approach for assessing sustainable building, the Three Step Strategy (in the Netherlands named Trias Ecologica) has proven to be useful. This publication takes a detailed look at this Strategy.
format Book
author Santin, Olivia Guerra
spellingShingle Santin, Olivia Guerra
Environmental indicators for building design
author_facet Santin, Olivia Guerra
author_sort Santin, Olivia Guerra
title Environmental indicators for building design
title_short Environmental indicators for building design
title_full Environmental indicators for building design
title_fullStr Environmental indicators for building design
title_full_unstemmed Environmental indicators for building design
title_sort environmental indicators for building design
publisher IOS Press
publishDate 2013
url http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35061
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