Developing an early design stage embodied carbon prediction model : a case study

Michele Victoria, Srinath Perera, Alan Davies

Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

![CDATA[The focus of carbon management has shifted from operational carbon towards Embodied Carbon (EC) as a result of zero carbon agenda. Even though effort is made to quantify EC in detail design stage and choose the best solution for design there is no such approaches in managing EC during early stages of the design. The reason for this is lack of sufficient design information to quantify EC at early design stages. Hence, this research intends to fill that gap by using a unique approach of predicting EC by capturing the relationship between design and morphological parameters (such as plan shape, storey height, no. of storeys, finishes quality, services quality, etc.) and EC. Some building elements can be considered as 'carbon hotspots' (carbon intensive). Since carbon and cost are known to be the currencies of sustainable construction projects, the aim of the study is to develop a decision support system to optimise design in terms of carbon and cost during early stages of design. The aim is to be achieved by developing a database of elemental (NRM compliant) EC and cost (using Hutchins UK Building Blackbook and other data sources) of sample office buildings in the UK and identifying the correlations of EC and cost with design parameters. Consequently, regression models will be derived as the key component for the DSS development. This paper presents a detailed literature review of EC and EC estimating tools, a detailed discussion of the proposed research method and exemplar case study of an office building and EC and capital cost analysis of the building. The paper concludes with the identification of the carbon hotspots for the building (mainly, substructure, frame, upper floor and external walls) and compares it with published case studies while exploring the implications of the case study for the DSS to be developed.]]
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings 31st Annual ARCOM Conference, 7-9 September 2015, Lincoln, UK
PublisherAssociation of Researchers in Construction Management
Pages267-276
Number of pages10
ISBN (Print)9780955239090
Publication statusPublished - 2015
EventARCOM (Association). Annual Conference -
Duration: 7 Sept 2015 → …

Conference

ConferenceARCOM (Association). Annual Conference
Period7/09/15 → …

Keywords

  • design and construction
  • embodied carbon
  • sustainable buildings

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Developing an early design stage embodied carbon prediction model : a case study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this