Carbon Value Engineering: integrated carbon and cost reduction strategies for building design release_g4hbwpoumbdrxcm434xyqbt4au

by Mehdi Robati, Philip F. Oldfield, Ali Akbar Nezhad, David Carmichael

Published by CRC for Low Carbon Living.

2019  

Abstract

The Carbon Value Engineering project aims to maximise the reduction of embodied carbon in the built environment. Rather than proposing a new process for these reductions, it adapts the industry-standard practice of value engineering (VE) for integrated carbon and cost minimisation. The project set out to answer two research questions:What is the impact of value engineering in its current form on building embodied carbon, and life-cycle carbon emissions?To what extent can the process of value engineering be adapted to maximise the reduction of embodied and life-cycle carbon emissions early in the design phase while also securing economic value?In the first stage of this research (Embodied Carbon and Capital Cost Impact of Current Value Engineering Practices: A Case Study) the authors determined that the traditional VE processes driven only by cost can reduce building embodied carbon emissions through dematerialisation. However, such reductions were small, with VE strategies applied to a case study building reducing material costs by 0.72%, and initial embodied carbon by 1.26% (6.67 kgCO2-e/m2) within a cradle-to-gate framework.In this final report, the authors demonstrate how considering cost and carbon simultaneously during VE can yield significant carbon and cost reductions at a late design stage, without fundamentally changing the building design (form, orientation, planning, etc).The research presents a Carbon Value Engineering framework. This is a quantitative value analysis method, which not only estimates cost but also considers the carbon impact of alternative design solutions. It is primarily concerned with reducing cost and carbon impacts of developed design projects; that is, projects where the design is already a completed to a stage where a Bill of Quantity (BoQ) is available, material quantities are known, and technical understanding of the building is developed.This framework is tested by exploring the same case study building as before. This time, a number of alternative [...]
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   5.4 MB
file_2zguqflgsfanpom6jxgwvqwkfa
apo.org.au (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  report
Stage   published
Year   2019
Language   en ?
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: d3087fd6-8940-447f-924b-eacf74774c55
API URL: JSON