Abstract

Resource management is becoming increasingly important in the construction sector. In order to support the recycling of materials, it is necessary to determine the quantities in the building stock and those caused by construction activities. At present, a large number of different actors use different categories for construction materials and the raw materials they consist of as well as for waste categories, depending on their field of activity. This results in imprecisions that make it difficult to consistently track and influence mass flows and hinder targeted resource management. This is the starting point of this paper as it discusses possibilities to establish a consistent allocation of materials to context-typical groups following the approach of continuous material flow analysis. On the input-side, aspects of mineral planning and on the output-side aspects of waste and secondary raw material management are being considered and references to grey emissions are established along the entire process chain. In this way, cross-departmental planning relating to recycling management and climate protection will be supported. With regard to the object of consideration and the level of action, a distinction is made between two different spatial scale levels: on the one hand, the individual building level, where the material inventory approach is used to provide detailed information on the building’s material composition, and on the other hand the regional level, for which more aggregated information on building material groups is provided in the form of material cadastres. Current results of a research project in Germany are presented.

Highlights

  • With regard to the object of consideration and the level of action, a distinction is made between two different spatial scale levels: on the one hand, the individual building level, where the material inventory approach is used to provide detailed information on the building’s material composition, and on the other hand the regional level, for which more aggregated information on building material groups is provided in the form of material cadastres

  • Context The construction sector is the main cause of anthropogenic material flows [1], which affect the use of natural resources and the climate [2]

  • Material flows induced by the production, use, recycling and end of life processes of construction materials and products are analysed and quantified in successive process steps. This includes a transition from one category to the

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Summary

Introduction

Context The construction sector is the main cause of anthropogenic material flows [1], which affect the use of natural resources and the climate [2]. The sustainable management of these flows must be guided by the principles of conserving natural resources and minimising undesirable effects on the global and local environment resulting from the production, use, recycling and end of life processes of building. Active resource management at these levels is currently still hindered by (1) a large number of actors involved and a lack of incentives to create and maintain standardised material information/documentation, (2) interrupted information flows, and (3) a lack of a system of categories/identifiers and (waste) code numbers that allow a continuous tracking of material flows. There are references to the indicators of SDG 11 and SDG 13

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