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Title: Module 1


1
Module 1
  • Defining an Ecology of Construction

2
A QUESTION OFDESIGN
A QUESTION OFDESIGN
DIALOGUE
3
A QUESTION OFDESIGN
DELIBERATIVEDIALOGUE
RECONNECTION
REGENERATION
RESILIENCE
RECONCILIATION
DIALOGUE
4
RECONNECTION
DELIBERATIVEDIALOGUE
PLACE
SPACE
ECOLOGICAL, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPERATIVES
DELIBERATIVE DESIGN
ZERO WASTE
RECONCILIATION
5
REGENERATION
RECONNECTION
DIVERSITY
DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE
COMPASSION
ZERO WASTE
6
RESILIENCE
REGENERATION
RECIPROCITY
REDUNDANCY
MAINTENANCE
COMPASSION
SCALE
7
RESILIENCE
RECONCILIATION
LIMITS
SCALE
DIVERSITY
MAINTENANCE
PLACE
8
SUSTAINABLECOMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
COMMONUnitySENSE
DELIBERATIVEDIALOGUE
RECONCILIATION
DIVERSITY
9
SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
COMMONUnitySENSE
A VISION FOR THE FUTURE
DR. ANN DALECANADA RESEARCH CHAIRROYAL ROADS
UNIVERSITY
10
Overview
  • Introduction to concepts
  • Environmental systems
  • Industrial ecology
  • Political and economic environment
  • Green design
  • Summary and Conclusions

11
Sustainable Construction
  • Creating a healthy built environment based on
    ecologically sound principles
  • Built Environment
  • Life cycle (planning, design, construction,
    operation, renovation/retrofit,
    demolition/deconstruction)
  • Resources (materials, land, energy, water)
  • Principles Reduce, reuse, recycle, protect
    nature, eliminate toxics, life cycle costing
  • Principles of Ecology
  • Ecosystems are cyclic, resilient, diversified,
    efficient, complex
  • Function and interdependence at multiple scales

12
Applications of the Ecological Metaphor to Human
Systems
  • Urban Ecology
  • Social Ecology
  • Political Ecology
  • Industrial Ecology

13
Industrial Ecology
  • Material Basis choice of material, product
    design, product recovery
  • Institutional Forces market structure, financial
    considerations, regulatory environment
  • Regional Strategies geographic, economic and
    political issues industrial symbiosis

14
Construction Ecology
  • Can be viewed as a subset of industrial ecology,
    but with characteristics that link it back to
    social, political, urban systems.
  • Major subset 8 of GDP, 40 of materials
    consumption and 30 of energy resources.
  • Potential Factor 10 reduction

15
Construction Ecology
  • Goals
  • Closed-loop material system
  • Dependence on renewable resources
  • Preservation of / integration with natural
    systems
  • Accomplishment of these goals at all scales

16
Construction EcologyWould Create a Built
Environment That
  • Is deconstructable
  • Has easily replaceable components
  • Uses recycled products
  • Uses recyclable products
  • Has a very slow metabolism
  • Promotes the health of occupants / users
  • Promotes a symbiotic relationship with the
    natural environment

17
Forging a New View
  • Some ancient societies have persevered for many
    centuries by living in equilibrium, and in a
    sense of harmony, with the environment.
  • More technologically advanced societies have
    committed ecological suicide.
  • Technology may not offer the best answers.
  • We may wish to pursue an understanding of

18
Ecosystem Components
  • Inorganic substances (carbon, nitrogen)
  • Organic compounds (proteins, etc)
  • Climate regime (temperature, rainfall)
  • Autotrophic organisms (producers)
  • Heterotrophic organisms (consumers)
  • Herbivores (primary consumers)
  • Carnivores (secondary consumers)
  • Tertiary consumers
  • Decomposers
  • (Yeang 7,8)


19
Lessons From Natural SystemsEcosystems
maintain resilience through diversifiedfunctions.
Separate niches provide non-competitivelifesty
les among different species.
  • Fundamental Niche-that which is available to a
    species
  • Realized Niche-that which is being used by a
    species

20
Lessons From Natural Systems
  • Mature ecosystems are efficient by using a
    cooperative web.
  • Mature ecosystems are complex enough to change
    with the external environment.
  • Mature ecosystems are cyclic and operate with
    solar flux and organic storage(Odum and Brown).

21
Lessons From Natural Systems
  • Natural systems are not sustainable over long
  • periods of time.
  • Constant change shapes their existence, and
  • their existence begins and ends as a part of a
  • larger system.
  • By studying natural systems we can expect to
  • improve the effectiveness of our design process
    and
  • products.
  • James Kay (will be covered later in the course)

22
  • A brief history of life on earth
  • Stage one fermentation based, anabolic, carbon
    dioxide producing, and anaerobic
  • Stage two photosynthetic, carbon consuming, and
    oxygen producing (oxygen as toxic substance)
  • Stage three oxygen consuming, and capable of
    metabolizing multiple molecules

23
Industrial System
  • Our current industrial systems are equivalent to
    Stage One of life on Earth-- Carbon consuming and
    carbon dioxide emitting.
  • Our current industrial systems are consuming
    solar produced resources (fossil fuels) at 10,000
    times the rate of regeneration.

24
Industrial System
  • The creation of the built environment generates
    0.4 to 0.5 tons of waste per capita per year.
    (Based on projections of 2000 census data, this
    is somewhere between 120 million tons and 150
    million tons per year in U.S.).
  • Construction industry provides 8 of GDP while
    using 40 of materials and 30 of energy
    resources in U.S.
  • Our built environment currently stores as much as
    90 of extracted materials

25
The Ecology of Systems
  • H.T. Odums Systems Ecology deals with the
    transformation of energy as it moves through
    various systems.
  • It all begins with sunlight.
  • The energy in sunlight is transformed by natural
    processes (e.g. photosynthesis, tidal flows),
    building biomass or yielding energy in other
    forms.
  • ALL other forms of energy are quantifiable in
    terms of sunlight thus a common currency for
    evaluating the impacts and efficiency of systems.

26
  • Five General Building Components of
  • Built Environment
  • Manufactured, site installed components
  • (windows, doors, etc)

27
Five General Building Components ofBuilt
Environment
  • Engineered, off-site fabricated, site assembled
  • (Structural trusses, etc)

28
Five General Building Components ofBuilt
Environment
  • Off-site processed, site finished products
  • (Concrete, asphalt, etc)

29
Five General Building Components ofBuilt
Environment
  • Manufactured, site processed
  • (Lumber, drywall, wiring, etc)

30
Five General Building Components ofBuilt
Environment
  • Manufactured, site-installed, low mass
  • Products (Paints, glues, etc)

31
Managing the Five Components of the Built
Environment
  • Designing for cyclical patterns of use
  • Dematerialization
  • Closed loop material cycles

32
Designing For Cyclical Pattern of Use
  • The energy and material cost of recovery
  • The ecosystem impacts of dismantling and recovery
  • The emissions and outputs of recovery process
  • The form, type, and mass of materials used in the
    built system
  • (Yeang 136)

33
Designing For Cyclical Pattern of Use
  • The forms of construction
  • The manner of demolition or dismantling
  • The existence of a use or a need for the
    recovered product
  • Choice of servicing system
  • (Yeang 138)

34
Dematerialization
  • Definition The reduction of quantities of
    materials needed to serve economic functions or
    the decline over time in the weight of materials
    used in industrial end-products.
  • Dematerialization serves to reduce resource
    consumption and reduce weight of the built
    environment.
  • Dematerialization and a cyclic pattern of use can
    help close material cycles

35
Closed Loop Material Cycles
  • Buildings are not currently designed or built to
    be disassembled
  • Products constituting the built environment are
    not designed for disassembly
  • The material constituting building products are
    often composite and difficult to recycle
  • These difficulties increase resource consumption,
    cost, and waste

36
Difficulties with Dematerialization
  • Does not take into consideration the by-products
    of materials extraction and processing
  • Encourages use of light weight composite
    materials that are difficult if not impossible to
    recycle
  • Currently struggles against free market system
    that promotes diversity and availability
  • Lacks emphasis on recycling and reuse,
    detoxification, decarbonization, and
    deenergization
  • Lack of coordination between economic,
    industrial, and governmental systems to encourage
    or enforce dematerialization

37
Political / Economic Environment
  • Federal Initiatives
  • EPA Energy Star Program US Government
    Buildings Construction Guidelines
  • Market Conditions and Strategies
  • USGBC LEED Extended Producer Responsibility
    (EPR)

38
Political / Economic Environment
  • National Organizations
  • US Green Building Council National Association
    of Home Builders (NAHB)
  • State and Local Ordinances
  • Florida Green Building Coalition
  • Local Green Building Enterprises
  • Austin, TX Seattle, WA

39
Market Conditions and Strategies
  • US Green Building Council
  • State and Local Green Building Initiatives
    Committee
  • 15 local and state entities, developing tools
    to disseminate information and help governing
    bodies create mandates and incentives for green
    building.
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)
  • Primary implementation is in Europe aim is to
    shift costs and physical obligations of
    production of goods from municipalities and
    individuals to producers themselves. Focus is
    on assigning responsibility to producers for
    mitigating / minimizing environmental impacts,
    with an emphasis on upstream effects.

40
Federal Initiatives
  • EPA Energy Star Program
  • Partnering system between government and
    business, aimed at reducing energy consumption
    of facilities through upgrades of building
    components, systems, and appliances.
  • US Government Buildings
  • Federal Energy Management Program Greening
    Federal Facilities, Second Edition
  • Buildings must conform to a project-specific
    point system that accounts for factors such as
    local fuel costs, climate, and construction
    costs for energy efficiency measures

41
National Organizations
  • US Green Building Council LEED Rating System
  • Leadership in Energy and Environmental
    Design Voluntary, consensus-based, market-driven
    initiative based on existing, proven technology.
    Whole building, entire life cycle,
    performance-oriented. Definitive standard for
    green building in US.
  • National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)
  • 200,000 members in 800 local chapters.
    Pamphlet Building Greener, Building Better
    gives an overview of green design strategies and
    energy consumption improvements in residential
    construction. Fact sheets on environmental
    issues published for contractor education.

42
State and Local Ordinances
  • Maryland Green Building Council
  • Energy-conservation orientation, promotes
    efficiency upgrades rather than
    construction-oriented initiatives.
  • Boulder, CO Green Points Building Program
  • Green Points New Home Program requires
    selection among acceptable options for receipt
    of a building permit for new construction and
    additions over 500sf.
  • Green Points Remodeling Program voluntary
    program encouraging homeowners with small
    projects to seek green solutions.

43
Local Green Building Initiatives
  • Austin, TX Green Building Program
  • the first comprehensive program to encourage
    using sustainable building techniques in
    residential, multifamily, commercial and
    municipal construction.
  • Provides technical assistance, program
    membership for building professionals, rating
    system, education and outreach.
  • Seattle, WA
  • Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) partners with
    other government agencies, businesses,
    educational institutions, and non-profit
    organizations to promote sustainable design and
    construction practices and technology in the
    building and landscaping industries.

44
Green Design
  • Ecological Design
  • Historical Advocates
  • Goals of Green Design
  • Sustainable Example Thurgoona Campus
  • Green Home Improvement

45
Ecological Design
  • Also termed Green Design
  • Definition (as stated by Van der Ryn and Cowen,
    1996)
  • Any form of design that minimizes environmentally
    destructive impacts by integrating itself with
    living processes.
  • Sustainable construction (as stated by Kibert,
    1994)
  • The creation and maintenance of a healthy built
    environment using ecologically sound principles.
  • Specifically materials that are natural,
    renewable and native, with low embodied E. Is
    this true?

46
Historical Advocates
  • Architects
  • Frank Lloyd Wright
  • Richard Neutra
  • Malcolm Wells
  • Urban Planners
  • Lewis Mumford
  • John Tillman Lyle

47
Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect
  • Lived 1869 - 1959
  • Inspired by his mentor, Louis Sullivan, whose
    slogan was form follows function
  • Coined the term organic architecture meaning to
    reinterpret natures principles.
  • Wright believed that a buildings design should be
    influenced by its site and function.

48
Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect
  • Guggenheim Museum in New York City, 1959
  • Ziggurat allows people to descend a continuous
    ramp at their own pace.
  • Nautilus shape allows for free space.
  • Design fuses the paintings and building into a
    symphony of art.
  • Considered refreshing architecture

49
Frank Lloyd Wright, Architect
  • 1935s FallingWater, where forest, rock, stream
    and all the elements of structure come together
  • Experience nature as the habitat that formed us,
    find spiritual awakening
  • The walls are made of the native Pottsville
    sandstone

50
Richard Neutra, Architect
51
Richard Neutra, Architect
  • Lovell House, 1929

52
Richard Neutra, Architect
  • Lived 1892-1970. Began US career in Los Angeles,
    1923.
  • Known for flat-surfaced, industrialized
    residential buildings that contrast against
    nature
  • Favorite materials steel, stucco, concrete, wood
    and glass
  • Biophilia close connections between living
    spaces and nature

53
Richard Neutra, Architect
  • As an architect, my life has been governed by
    the goals of building environmental harmony,
    functional efficiency and human enhancement into
    the experience of everyday life.
  • He placed special provisions, such as built in
    furniture and flat roof gardens, into buildings
    for the purpose of functionality

54
Malcolm Wells, Architect
  • Believes that man should leave nature alone.
  • Build underground on ruined sites and allow
    nature to eventually return
  • Laments that time is running out for land-killing
    projects, and he happily awaits their certain
    demise

55
Lewis Mumford, Urban Planner
  • Lived 1895 - 1990
  • Stringent opponent to large-scale public works in
    New York City
  • I would die happy if I knew that on my tombstone
    could be written these words, This man was an
    absolute fool. None of the disastrous things that
    he reluctantly predicted ever came to pass!

56
Lewis Mumford, Urban Planner
  • In 1964, The City in History. Documentaries
    concerning his concerns with a technological
    city
  • The role of the city in magnifying the opposing
    creative and destructive potentials of Man
  • Technology breeds boredom
  • Commercial values and factory regimentation
    undermined human values and variety
  • Urges that suburban areas be provided with more
    points of pedestrian scale for vital human
    congregation, as found in city centers, and that
    the urban centers be given some of the
    spaciousness found in suburbia

57
Lewis Mumford, Urban Planner
  • Believed in Ecotechnics An early form of
    bioregionalism and biourbanism. Promotes
    technologies that rely on local sources of energy
    and indigenous materials
  • Noted that infrastructure should be built to
    maximize the free work that nature provides.

58
John Tillman Lyle, Landscape Architect / Urban
Planner
  • Began career around the 1980s, which was cut
    short in 1998 due to an untimely death.
  • One of the most renowned ecological designers of
    our time.
  • Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development
  • Proven regenerative practices for water use, land
    use, energy use and building design.

59
Ecological Building
60
Ecological Building
  • What can be learnt from history?
  • In the past, human beings lived in harmony with
    their environment
  • Comfort requirements were different
  • Small population meant ample space, modest
    requirements, low energy needs and emissions
  • Waste products mostly recyclable bio-degradable
  • Mobile communities
  • Low threat to the environment

Nomadic life sparse requirements drove the
architecture of the past and made it sustainable
61
Ecological Building
  • Buildings in cold climates characterized by
  • Small windows that allowed little light into
    spaces resulting in minimal heat gains/loss and
    cooling/heating loads
  • Building mass with high thermal storage
    capacities
  • Low standards for heating and sanitary systems

These castles in Europe use small fenestrations
to minimize heat loss
62
Ecological Building
  • Buildings in temperate zones characterized by
  • Tendency to locate living areas underground to
    utilize coolness of the earth and create
    ventilation through buoyancy
  • Small window roof elements minimizing heat
    transfer
  • Use of narrow courtyards to promote ventilation
  • Fine grained cities that cause mutual shading
  • Use of water as an architectural element

63
Ecological Building
  • The Industrial Age is characterized by
  • Migration of ever increasing population from
    rural to urban areas
  • Extremely poor living conditions for most people
  • Industrialization rapid advances in technology
  • Increased demands for energy met through use of
    coal gas
  • Sharp increase in emissions indiscriminate
    dumping of wastes
  • No efforts to protect environment, conserve
    natural reserves
  • BEGINNING OF AN ENVIRONMENTAL CALAMITY

Alarming number of industries, poor living
conditions, deteriorating environment mark the
industrial era
64
Ecological Building
  • The early mid 20th century is characterized by
  • Urbanization, technological development,
    industrialization, concentration of labor in
    cities at a frantic pace
  • Concentration of workplaces in small areas
  • Shortening of distances for communication
    information
  • Maximized utilization of available spaces
  • An architecture technology that pays no respect
    to the environment energy consumption
  • A false sense of Man has overcome nature
  • Skyscrapers, fully automated climate control

New York the city of skyscrapers
65
Ecological Building
  • Late 20th century architecture characterized by
  • Renewed search for elegant architectural solution
    with respect to energy use, environment
    ventilation
  • Facades designed for natural ventilation
  • Creation of climate buffer zones (halls and
    atria)
  • Improved heat insulation sun protection
  • Implementation of energy recovery waste
    treatment systems
  • Major energy crisis in 1973
  • Architects, engineers clients turn to
    ECOLOGICAL BUILDING DESIGN

Commerzbank headquarters in Germany by Architect
Norman Foster uses garden terraces every 12 floors
Menara Mesiniaga by Ken Yeang in Malaysia is a
revolutionary high-rise building design using
sustainable principles
66
All things are connected like the blood that
unites us,  We did not weave the web of life.  We
are merely a strand in it.  Whatever we do to the
web, we do to ourselves. 
  • -Chief Seattle

67
Goals of Green Design
  • Methods to Achieve Sustainability

68
Methods of Sustainability
  • Reduce resource consumption
  • Reuse of resources/use recycled materials
  • Recycle built environment at end of life
  • Switch to materials with low E processing
  • Eliminate toxic materials and by-products in all
    phases of the built environment

69
Methods of Sustainability
  • Protect natural systems and their function in all
    activities
  • Incorporate full-cost accounting in all
    economic decisions
  • Incorporate Ecotechnics, Bioregionalism and
    Biourbanism
  • local E sources, indigenous materials
  • vary craftsmanship, beauty and aesthetics

70
Methods of Sustainability
  • Conservation, regeneration and stewardship of the
    natural environment
  • Front-loaded design
  • Disassembly and remanufacturing
  • Increase of energy and material efficiency
  • No such term as waste, return beneficial
    nutrients back to environment

71
Sustainable Example
  • Thurgoona Campus at Charles Sturt University in
    Australia. Consists of the School of
    Environmental and Information Sciences, a
    herbarium, computer network center, and
    accommodation cottages.

72
Thurgoona Campus
  • Winner of the 1996, 1999, and 2000 RiverCare 2000
    Award by the New South Wales Government.
  • One of nine winners at the International Design
    Resource Awards 2000 in Belfast, Ireland for the
    incorporation of recycled materials.
  • In 2000, Marci Webster-Mannison and her team won
    the National Resource Efficiency Award and
    National Energy Efficiency Award presented by the
    Master Builders Association of Australia.

73
Site Selection and Eco Design
  • Old abandoned land bought in 1993
  • Set up with a natural water management system
    involving wetlands, retention basins, composting
    toilets, windmills and solar energy.

74
Use of Renewable Energy
75
Design of Built Environment
  • Building and road locations follow the contours
    of the hills to minimize the loss of soil due to
    erosion.

76
Building Materials and System Designs
77
Building Materials
  • Buildings are constructed of rammed earth walls
    and concrete floors
  • Large, shaded windows with recycled timber frames
    allow the sun to provide 85 of total lighting
    energy

78
Building Materials Cont.
  • Recycled timber, and plantation wood
  • Used/recycled library shelving from a donor
  • Structural steel and glass
  • Minimal use of PVC piping in plumbing and may use
    plumbing seconds
  • Wool roof insulation
  • Wool and linoleum flooring
  • Non toxic paints and timber finishes
  • Mesh guards on vents provides protection from
    termites

79
Heating and Cooling Systems
  • Through the methods and materials used at
    Thurgoona Campus, energy consumption is reduced
    by 61

80
Heating Systems
  • Heating and cooling system consists of solar
    panels and water pipes
  • Wool insulation above ceiling
  • Rammed earth walls

81
Ventilation System
  • Small and large vents
  • Open windows and ceiling fans that will reverse
    in winter to circulate heat
  • Thermal chimneys

82
Summary and Conclusions
  • The construction industry (as an industrial
    system) can and should be understood through an
    analogy with natural systems thus,
    Construction Ecology
  • Such a comparison can be used to rethink and
    redesign the built environment to cause less
    damage to and work in harmony with the natural
    environment

83
Summary and Conclusions
  • Construction ecology deals with all aspects of
    the construction process
  • Material cycles
  • Energy use
  • Water consumption
  • Emissions
  • Construction management
  • Post-occupancy operations
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