Abstract

Urbanization has a massive effect on the environment, both locally and globally. With an ever-increasing scale of construction and manufacturing and misuse of energy resources come poorer air quality, growing mortality rates and more rapid climate change. For these reasons, a healthy and safe built environment is ever more in demand. Global debates focus on sustainable development of the built environment; a rational approach to its analysis is multiple criteria decision making (MCDM) methods. Alternative MCDM methods applied to the same problem often produce different results. In the search for a more reliable tool, this study proposes that a system of MCDM methods should be applied to a single problem. This article assesses 21 neighborhoods in Vilnius in the context of a healthy and safe built environment in view of the principles of sustainable development. MCDM methods were used for this purpose: entropy, Criterion Impact LOSs (CILOS) and Integrated Determination of Objective Criteria Weights (IDOCRIW) methods were used to determine the objective weights of the criteria, while expert judgement determined the subjective weights. With the overall weights determined, the Vilnius neighborhoods were assessed through the application of COmplex PRoportional ASsessment (COPRAS), Simple Additive Weighting (SAW), Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) and Evaluation based on Distance from Average Solution (EDAS) methods. The final results were then processed using the rank average method, Borda count and Copeland’s method.

Highlights

  • The built environment is responsible for significant use of final energy (62%) and is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions (55%) [1]

  • In the analysis of a healthy and safe built environment, this article applies the multiple criteria decision making (MCDM) methods: COmplex PRoportional ASsessment (COPRAS), Simple Additive Weighting (SAW), TOPSIS, Evaluation based on Distance from Average Solution (EDAS) [20,21,22]

  • Debates are common in the scientific literature about whether a balance between the economic, environmental and social development of the built environment and cultural Sudstiavinearbsiliittyy 2i0s17a,t9ta, 7in02able in practice

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Summary

Introduction

The built environment is responsible for significant use of final energy (62%) and is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions (55%) [1]. According to Joffe and Smith [2], cities contribute the vast majority of emissions, and a growing proportion of the world’s population lives in cities. Many scientists look at a healthy and safe environment in terms of land use, transport, architectural design policies and strategies, strategic planning, collaborative design, etc. An article by Mohtashami et al [4] determines policies and strategies for the architectural design of healthy buildings according to the health and safety conditions that influence the quality of the internal spaces and the external environments of cities

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