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Photo of BedZED eco village showing colourful wind cowls. Copyright Bioregional.

Building use

Different building types and uses present a range of sustainability challenges and opportunities, with varying governance and decision-making factors involved. 

A range of approaches and policies appropriate to the type and use case can drive sustainability improvements for domestic, commercial and municipal buildings. Additionally, it is estimated that a billion people live in slums or informal settlements.  Consideration of how to improve sustainability of housing, alongside living standards for this group of people forms a significant part of the global challenge in this area. 

Sustainable public procurement is a powerful tool to improve the sustainability of municipal construction, which includes schools, hospitals, government buildings, social housing and the built environment. Expenditure by public authorities on goods, services, and infrastructure accounts on average for 13% of the gross domestic product in OECD countries, and up to 30% in many developing countries. Globally, the public sector accounts for 20-30% of revenues in the construction industry.

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Photo credit © Unsplash / Ricardo Gomez Angel

Avoid’ strategies in this context should seek to build with less, avoid over-ordering and waste, and improve material circularity. For municipal buildings, there is an opportunity to enable adaptive re-use within a portfolio, or specify deconstruction instead of premature demolition.

Extending building lifetimes can reduce demand for materials and the embodied carbon expended. In the International Energy Agency’s most ambitious decarbonization scenario, extending building lifetimes would contribute to more than 90 per cent of the CO2 emission reductions for both steel and cement by 2060 (IEA 2019). Sustainable public procurement of more circular construction services, or contracts that specify material recovery targets, can reduce costs, as well as providing sustainability benefits for public authorities.  

Public sector procurement can also provide an opportunity to act as an early adopter of using more innovative materials and contribute to market transformation - more and more examples of public buildings deploying a ‘Shift’ strategy towards more sustainable materials are being seen.  And due to their relatively large purchasing power for materials such as concrete and steel in buildings and infrastructure projects, opportunities exist for ‘Improve’ strategies that can reduce the impacts of these materials within public procurement.

Domestic buildings, constructed by private sector companies have a different set of opportunities and challenges to move towards a more sustainable norm.  Where achieving the lowest cost is a driver, the use of sustainable materials may be deprioritised.  A combination of innovation on materials and construction practices, and an enabling environment of policies to reduce costs, can help push the domestic construction market towards increased use of sustainable materials. In some countries, it is vital to support industry to ‘leapfrog’ the use of higher carbon, conventional materials where there are more sustainable options.

Resources addressing the impacts of materials used in informal settlements are available on the Hub - these include case studies and research papers on how this type of community can act to reduce waste and health hazards as part of materials sourced, whilst improving living standards.

Best practices for different building uses need to be demonstrated and evaluated to show what is possible, driving policy and market support for more sustainable material use and design. Resources include planning tools, policy analysis and best practice case studies of buildings and materials, intended to inspire and promote action for the range of different building types and infrastructure projects.

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2022-12-09

This report aims to promote a sustainable development approach to meet the immense needs in terms of construction in Africa, based on a rational and sustainable use of local materials. To this end, it presents the advantages, challenges and conditions of use of these materials. It presents examples of technical solutions illustrated by a panorama of the potential resources of the territories (bio and geo-sourced). It provides elements of analysis of the impact of local "short circuit" channels and elements of methodology.

2022-12-09

A large part of the construction sector’s emissions come from building products and materials – referred to as embodied carbon. Embodied carbon is increasingly becoming the focus of regulatory bodies, making it a risk factor for developers and investors to price into construction projects.

2022-12-09

Urban cooling is a recent subject and the knowledge produced by research and the first experiments give various results, sometimes difficult to decipher for operational actors.

This guide offers a synthetic, multi-criteria and operational approach to emerging or proven solutions, adapted to different climatic and urban contexts. It is a question of clarifying the decision of the public and private actors, as well on their choices of installation, construction, renovation of the buildings as of installation of the external spaces.

 

2022-12-09

This report - Sri Lanka Roadmap for Sustainable Housing and Construction 2020 – 2050 - presents the findings of the Sustainable Building Construction Country Assessment for Sri Lanka (SBC-CA) and a Roadmap for Sustainable Housing and Construction and achieving NDCs in the construction industry in Sri Lanka. It examines the current status, and potential opportunities and challenges for adopting Sustainable Building Construction (SBC) practices and policies.

2022-12-09

The Transition Pathway Initiative Global Climate Transition Centre (TPI Centre) is an independent, authoritative source of research and data into the progress being made by the financial and corporate world in making the transition to a low-carbon economy.

2022-12-09

China is the world’s largest producer and consumer of cement. The industry accounts for 13 percent of the country’s total carbon emissions, making it the third largest-emitting industry after power and steel.

2022-12-09

This document was elaborated by the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance (CNCA) and Culmer Raphael under the project "Dramatically Reducing Embodied Carbon in Europe's Built Environment", which CNCA launched in 2021 with the support of the Laudes Foundation. The purpose of this document is to serve as a communications material that city staff can resort to when raising awareness of the importance of addressing embodied carbon and increasing the uptake of bio-based materials among their city-department peers.

2022-12-09

On 24 May 2022, WorldGBC launched the EU Policy Whole Life Carbon Roadmap for buildings as part of the #BuildingLife project.  This Roadmap outlines the key European Union (EU) policy interventions, regulatory measures and tools needed to achieve a decarbonised, circular, resilient and well-designed built environment by 2050. It focuses on measures to address whole life carbon (WLC) at the building level.

Created as part of the #BuildingLife project, this Roadmap provides:

2022-12-09

This volume on the building and construction sector provides an overview of the different sources of GHG emissions from the building and construction sector, as well as methodologies for quantifying these emissions to feed into the preparation and reporting of national GHG inventories. By better understanding the sources of emissions over the whole life cycle of buildings, it thus provides guidance on the most appropriate and effective mitigation strategies and policies for decarbonizing the building and construction sector based on national circumstances.

2022-12-09

10% of emissions from energy come from building materials and construction. We need to rethink how we construct our buildings. From resource-efficient designs with a longer lifetime, circular economy approaches and “urban mining” to increasing the market share of alternative building materials and decarbonising conventional materials like cement and steel, the solutions are there.