1st Edition

Circular Economy for the Built Environment Research and Practice

Edited By Rabia Charef Copyright 2024
    294 Pages 61 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book provides an overview of the circular economy in the built environment, presenting a fusion of insights from esteemed researchers and seasoned practitioners. The chapters cover pivotal themes, including the transformative concept of buildings as material banks, innovative design approaches, and the potential of digitalization for a circular built environment. Beyond these foundational themes, the book critically addresses the integration of low-tech solutions and some principles of sobriety in the built environment. It also takes an informed look at the role of standardization, providing nuanced insights into its driving influence on circular practices and the associated challenges and opportunities.

    The book adopts a trans-scalar perspective by traversing the entire spectrum of building phases from initial programming to the recovery phase, as well as from the scale of materials to the scale of buildings, offering a profound examination of the intricate dynamics involved in the offer/demand for recovered materials. This book highlights the paramount need to harmonize research with practical applications. By spotlighting effective circular practices and elucidating the challenges faced by practitioners, it identifies fertile grounds for further research. Moreover, the book extends its reach by offering practical ideas on how practitioners can seamlessly adopt a circular approach in both thought and realization.

    Circular Economy for the Built Environment: Research and Practice is a must-read book for students, researchers, academics, and practitioners in the fields of architecture, planning, engineering, construction, and real estate. This book provides a compelling narrative that bridges the theoretical and practical realms of the circular economy in the built environment.

    Part I. Setting the foundation for circular construction. 
    1. The future of the circular built environment: interest of a “low-tech” approach.
    Rabia Charef and Philippe Bihouix
    2. The reuse of building elements: touchstone of a circular construction economy.
    Lionel Devlieger and Arne Vande Capelle
    3. Buildings as material mines – towards digitalization of resource cadasters for circular economy.
    Maud Lanau, Leonardo Rosado, Danielle Densley Tingley and Holger Wallbaum
    4. Boosting construction waste material circularity: A sharing economy approach.
    Weisheng Lu
    5. The role of standardisation in circular economy for the construction sector.
    Michael Neaves
    Part II. Practical strategies for circular construction: building and material levels.
    6. How can we view buildings as material banks? Learning from the pre-redevelopment process.
    Katherine Tebbatt Adams and Gilli Hobbs
    7. The potential for reusing reinforced concrete beams: technical feasibility and environmental impact.
    Ambroise Lachat, Tiffany Desbois, Adélaïde Feraille, Anne-Sophie Colas
    8. Building together with the site materials: a practitioner’s perspective.
    Louis Antoine Grégo
    9. Towards a situated understanding of challenges in the design and construction of circular earth buildings: the case study of an office building in France.
    Antoine Pele-Peltier and Jean Goizauskas
    Part III. Fostering circular construction through digital transformation.
    10. Digitalizing the deconstruction process: towards a circular economy for the construction industry.
    Annie Guerriero, Elma Durmisevic, Calin Boje and Nico Mack
    11. Accelerating material reuse in construction: two case studies: one life, multiple cycles, a longer life.
    Ana Rute Costa, Rachel Hoolahan and Melanie Martin
    12. Additive manufacturing and circular economies.
    Jennifer Johns, Daniel Eyers , Rick Lupton, Aris Syntetos and Jessica Robins

    Biography

    Dr Rabia Charef serves as a Research Associate at Lancaster University (UK) actively contributing to the establishment of a circular future. With an extensive 15 years of industry experience, she spent over a dozen years leading intricate architectural projects in the residential and healthcare sectors. Transitioning to academia, she leverages her industry insights to fuel research closely tied to practitioners’ needs and challenges, taking a bottom‑up approach.