Abstract

Increasing the construction of wooden apartment buildings has its place as part of preventing climate change. This chapter aims to explore the possibilities of expanding the construction of wooden apartment buildings on plots owned by the City of Helsinki in the Mellunkylä area by developing a series-produced wooden apartment building concept suitable for complementary construction—The Noppa concept. The sustainability of this approach is considered from the perspective of materials, construction methods, adaptability of the designed spaces, and housing design flexibility. In this study, the Noppa wooden apartment building concept with cross-laminated timber (CLT) elements has been developed varying in its facilities and architectural design features through architectural modeling programs to be used for complementary construction. The research findings are based on a theoretical approach that has not yet been practically tested but is proposed considering existing construction practices that need further investigation. It is believed that this chapter will contribute to the spread of wooden apartments to achieve a low-carbon economy as one of the key tools in tackling climate change problems. Particularly, proposed architectural design solutions will contribute to decarbonization of buildings as well as zero energy building (nZEB) approach.

Highlights

  • Until recently, Finnish building codes were only an incentive to construct lowenergy buildings, and Finland had no legislation or guidelines on life-cycle emissions

  • This chapter aimed to search for the possibilities of expanding the construction of wooden apartment buildings in the Mellunkylä region by developing a mass-produced wooden apartment concept suitable for complementary construction—“The Noppa concept.”

  • The results were the architectural design proposals based on a theoretical approach considering contemporary applications in the wooden apartment construction market, but further research such as life-cycle assessment will be done as part of other studies

Read more

Summary

Introduction

“Net Zero Energy Buildings” will be the big frontier for innovation and competition in the world’s real estate market and can be promptly scaled in Europe as in North America [1]. Like Finland’s national goal, the Helsinki-Uusimaa Region aims for climate neutrality by 2035 [11] In this sense, bio-based materials such as wood come to the fore with many advantages such as good indoor air quality, thermal insulation [12]. This study targets Mellunkylä, one of the Helsinki-owned plots where the possibility of complementary construction is being considered In this context, architectural design has an important opportunity to support sustainable development [29]. In Finland, this will be promoted toward the end of 2020, graduating from the architectural policy program proposal of the Ministry of Education and Culture as well as the Ministry of the Environment [30], with the main theme being combating climate change and sustainability toward sustainable architecture In this sense, architects can make a great contribution to a constructive building culture by ensuring the ecological quality and sustainability of the living environment. It is believed that this study will help the dissemination of wooden apartment buildings for different and innovative architectural applications as one of the key tools to contribute to decarbonization of buildings and nZEB approach

Research method
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call