Abstract

SummaryMaterial usage and the related embodied environmental impact have grown in significance in the built environment. Therefore, cities and governments need to develop strategies to reduce both the consumption of resources during usage phase as well as the embodied impact of the current building stock. This article proposes a new component‐based building inventory database as a basis to develop such strategies using building stock modeling. The developed database clusters the building stock according to building typology (single‐family houses, multifamily houses, and office buildings), age, and the main construction systems of the different building components. Based on the component makeup, it lists the necessary material input and waste output for different refurbishment options for each building component. The advantages of the proposed database structure are shown based on two applications for the developed database for Switzerland. The component‐based database allows optimization of refurbishment strategies not only from an energetic perspective, but also with respect to materials, both on the input (sourcing of materials) and the output (waste streams) level. The database structure makes it possible to continuously extend the data set by adding new refurbishment options or add data such as component‐specific lifetimes, costs, or labor intensities of the refurbishment options. In combination with an aligned economic model, this would give an even more holistic view, impact, and feasibility of different refurbishment scenarios both in environmental and economic terms.

Highlights

  • The recent 5th Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on climate change lists cities as main contributors to climate change

  • Material usage and the related embodied environmental impact have grown in significance in the built environment

  • The developed database clusters the building stock according to building typology, age, and the main construction systems of the different building components

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Summary

Introduction

The recent 5th Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on climate change lists cities as main contributors to climate change. Apart from the consumption of energy in the usage phase of buildings, building materials making up cities are listed as being of high relevance as well (IPCC 2014). Current European building standards already aim for near zero energy buildings by the early 2020s and 2018 for public buildings (EU 2010). What remains is the issue of refurbishment strategies and material usage in the built environment, which is addressed by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Recourse Panel (UNEP 2013) and the European Commission (EC) Resource strategy (EC 2011) that needs to be enforced on the national level as well. The strategy for 2030, which was due for ratification in November 2014, should further

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