scholarly journals Erratum: Prioritizing urban sustainability solutions: coordinated approaches must incorporate scale-dependent built environment induced effects (2015 Environ. Res. Lett. 10 061001)

2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 079601 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Georgescu ◽  
W T L Chow ◽  
Z H Wang ◽  
A Brazel ◽  
B Trapido-Lurie ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Mohit Arora ◽  
Felix Raspall ◽  
Arlindo Silva

Cities have been the focus of recent sustainability and climate change mitigation efforts primarily because of unprecedented urban growth and ever-increasing resources consumption. A worrying trend has been the ever-decreasing life of buildings in cities because of premature building obsolescence. Premature building obsolescence has been cited as the major driver of demolition waste which accounts for more than 40% of total waste generated annually. This waste stream poses a bigger challenge as the pressure on natural resources increases with urban growth. A traditional way of looking at the urban sustainability has been from the perspective of the environmental sciences and waste management methods. Analyzing urban areas with design science perspectives could provide novel insights to improve existing resource consumption patterns and transform sustainability growth in cities. This study focuses on the problem of demolition waste arising from the premature building obsolescence in cities. It applies a design research methodology framework for identifying existing problems associated with demolition waste and generating strategies to transform cities into more sustainable urban systems. In the problem clarification phase, a detailed literature review was supported with stakeholder’s interviews to identify the state-of-art for building demolition process and demolition waste. Research was further extended to descriptive study-I phase to carry out a demolition case study and generate support tools to enable transformation in the existing scenario for achieving a desired state. Singapore, a dense city state of South-East Asia has been taken as a case study in this research. Results show that applying design research methods could help open-up a new dimension to solve urban sustainability challenge for built environment. It highlights that material reuse could lead to significant improvement in the built environment sustainability but the challenge associated with realization of material reuse practice needs to be addressed. Descriptive study-I concludes with the strategies on creating a reuse market through entrepreneurial innovation and an alternative material supply chain of secondary materials for regional housing demand. These results highlight the role of design research methods for tackling complex systems level problems in cities.


Buildings ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taher Osman ◽  
Prasanna Divigalpitiya ◽  
Mustafa Osman ◽  
Emad Kenawy ◽  
Muhammad Salem ◽  
...  

MODUL ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 27
Author(s):  
Chely Novia Bramiana ◽  
Ratih Widiastuti

nowadays, sustainability has become an important issue in any development project, including area development. Thishappen because the area development requires space, in this case land. As people developing land, it damages theenvironment. It means there will be less balance between built environment and natural environment. This calls forconcern in urban sustainability. One of the ways to restore the balance is to reduce as much land as possible to be builtby maximizing the space. This paper will explore the multiple space use in terms of mixed-use development in differentlevel and also assess mixed land use implementation, which include the concept of diversity in urban sustainability


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (14) ◽  
pp. 5661
Author(s):  
Daniel Bergquist ◽  
Daniela Garcia-Caro ◽  
Sofie Joosse ◽  
Madeleine Granvik ◽  
Felix Peniche

While urban areas hold great potential for contributing to sustainable development, there is a critical need to better understand and verify what measures improve urban sustainability. To achieve this, this project implements emergy synthesis to evaluate the environmental support to a building—called Smaragden—located in a certified “green” urban district in Uppsala, Sweden. Inputs to the building’s construction and maintenance phases are accounted for, as are flows supporting the residents’ everyday practices (i.e., urban life), on a yearly per capita basis. In this way, the relative importance of lifestyle issues versus the built environment is quantified and compared. Key focus areas are identified where efficiency and sustainability gains are most likely. The emergy synthesis detailed the top contributors to urban resource consumption and revealed that both the lifestyle and built environment in Smaragden are highly unsustainable, ranking poorly in terms of the emergy indices calculated, and, when considered from a global emergy perspective, overshooting resource consumption by more than 70 times. The paper therefore concludes that interdependencies of urban districts on systems at larger scales of society and environment need to be explicitly addressed and actively incorporated in urban policy and planning, and that design interventions are hence grounded in a systems perspective on urban sustainability.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 061001 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Georgescu ◽  
W T L Chow ◽  
Z H Wang ◽  
A Brazel ◽  
B Trapido-Lurie ◽  
...  

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