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    Comparison of the environmental assessment of an identical office building with national methods

    TitleComparison of the environmental assessment of an identical office building with national methods
    Publication TypePapers in International Journals
    Year of Publication2019
    AuthorsFrischknecht R., Birgisdottir H., Chae C. - U., Lützkendorf T., Passer A., Alsema E., Balouktsi M., Berg B., Dowdell D., García Martínez A., Habert G., Hollberg A., König H., Lasvaux S., Llatas C., Nygaard Rasmussen F., Peuportier B., Ramseier L., Röck M., Soust Verdaguer B., Szalay Z., Bohne R. A., Bragança, L., Cellura M., Chau C. K., Dixit M., Francart N., Gomes V., Huang L., Longo S., Lupíšek A., Martel J., Mateus, R., Ouellet-Plamondon C., Pomponi F., Ryklová P., Trigaux D., and Yang W.
    Abstract

    The IEA EBC Annex 72 focuses on the assessment of the primary energy demand, greenhouse gas emissions and environmental impacts of buildings during production, construction, use (including repair and replacement) and end of life (dismantling), i.e. during the entire life cycle of buildings. In one of its activities, reference buildings (size, materialisation, operational energy demand, etc.) were defined on which the existing national assessment methods are applied using national (if available) databases and (national/regional) approaches. The “be2226” office building in Lustenau, Austria was selected as one of the reference buildings. TU Graz established a BIM model and quantified the amount of building elements as well as construction materials required and the operational energy demand. The building assessment was carried out using the same material and energy demand but applying the LCA approach used in the different countries represented by the participating Annex experts. The results of these assessments are compared in view of identifying major discrepancies. Preliminary findings show that the greenhouse gas emissions per kg of building material differ up to a factor of two and more. Major differences in the building assessments are observed in the transports to the construction site (imports) and the construction activities as well as in the greenhouse gas emissions of the operational energy demand (electricity). The experts document their practical difficulties and how they overcame them. The results of this activity are used to better target harmonisation efforts.

    JournalIOP Conf. Series: Earth and Environmental Science 323
    Volume323
    Issue2019
    Pagination1-11
    Date Published2019-09-11
    PublisherIOP Publishing Ltd
    ISSN1755-1315
    DOI10.1088/1755-1315/323/1/012037
    URLhttps://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1755-1315/323/1/012037
    KeywordsAnnex 72, Building life cycle assessment, Comparative Analysis, LCA
    Citation

    R Frischknecht et al 2019 IOP Conf. Ser.: Earth Environ. Sci. 323 012037

    RightsopenAccess
    Peer reviewedyes
    Statuspublished
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    About CTAC

    The Centre for Territory, Environment and Construction (CTAC) is a research unit of the School of Engineering of University of Minho (UMinho), recognised by the “FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia” (Foundation for Science and Technology), associated to the Department of Civil Engineering (DEC), with whom it shares resources and namely human resources.

    Currently CTAC aggregates 25 researchers holding a PhD of which 20 are faculty professors of the Civil Engineering Department. Read more


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