Abstract

PurposeThe environmental impact of the social building stock is relevant, particularly in emerging economies. Life cycle thinking is not yet established, however. Locally available, alternative building concepts could potentially reduce the environmental impact of the construction segment. This paper examines the environmental performance of “as-built” low-cost housing for an example of the Philippines, and the potential to reduce its environmental impact through use of three alternative building technologies: cement–bamboo frames, soil–cement blocks, and coconut board-based housing.MethodsLife cycle assessment models are implemented and evaluated with software SimaPro, using the single-impact indicators global warming potential (GWP) and cumulative energy demand (CED) and the multi-impact indicator Impact2002+. According to EN 15978, the life cycle phase product and construction process (A), use stage (B), end-of-life (C) and supplementary information beyond the building life cycle (D) have been assessed. Theoretically calculated inflows from standard construction procedures used in phase A have been verified with 3 years of empirical data from implemented construction projects. For phases B, C and D, attention was given to service life, use-phase, allocation of waste products, biogenic carbon and land-use assumptions. Scenarios reflect the actual situation in the emerging economy. Processes, such as heat recovery from thermal utilization, which are not existing nor near to implementation, were excluded.Results and discussionFor an assessment of the phases A–B–C–D with GWP, a 35% reduction of environmental impact for soil–cement blocks, 74% for cement–bamboo frame, and 83% for coconut board-based houses is obtained relative to a concrete reference house. In absolute terms, this relates to a reduction of 4.4, 9.3, and 10.3 t CO2 equivalents over a service life of 25 years. CED showed higher impacts for the biogenic construction methods coconut board and cement–bamboo frames of +8.0 and +4.7%, while the soil–cement technology was evaluated −7.1% compared to GWP. Sixteen of 17 midpoint categories of Impact2002+ confirmed an overall reduction potential of the alternative building methods, with the midpoint category land occupation being the exception rating the conventional practice over the alternatives.ConclusionsIt is concluded that the alternative construction technologies have substantial potential to reduce the environmental burden caused by the social housing sector. The service life of the alternative technologies plays a vital role for it. LCA for emerging economies needs to incorporate realistic scenarios applicable at their current state or belonging to the most probable alternatives to ensure valuable results. Recommendations for further research are provided.

Highlights

  • The construction sector ranks among the most energy-intensive, resource-depleting and emission-releasing industriesInt J Life Cycle Assess (2017) 22:1785–1801 globally (UNEP SBCI 2009; Ortiz et al 2009)

  • The general objective of the paper was to identify the environmental impact of low-rise residential concrete buildings on the low-income sector in the Philippines relative to three identified alternative construction technologies, namely, cement–bamboo frames, soil–cement blocks and coconut board-based houses through life cycle assessment (LCA)

  • The analysis focuses on the visualization of two single-impact indicators from among these 25: First, cumulative energy demand (CED), which provides a scientifically acknowledged good general indication of LCA results (Huijbregts et al 2010); second, global warming potential (GWP) from the International Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), which is a frequently used single impact indicator to retrieve numbers for CO2 savings (IPCC 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

The construction sector ranks among the most energy-intensive, resource-depleting and emission-releasing industriesInt J Life Cycle Assess (2017) 22:1785–1801 globally (UNEP SBCI 2009; Ortiz et al 2009). Over more than two decades, a pressing need for more sustainable urban housing at a global scale has been highlighted (Rasoolimanesh et al 2011; SDSN 2013) This has created incentives for formal material and construction providers to change their products and practices, and environmental concerns have received great attention with respect to buildings (Frischknecht et al 2015). The Philippines experience rapid urban growth, poverty increase, strong vulnerability of low-income groups to disasters and visible effects of climate change. These factors continuously exacerbate the housing backlog, which is why it has been chosen as pilot country for this paper

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