Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features

Within the highly waste-generative context of Australia, waste from demolition of office fit-out significantly contributes to unsustainable landfilling. The extant literature is, however, slim on scrutiny of the situation. Therefore, this study aims to uncover office fit-out demolition processes an...

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Main Authors: Alireza Ahmadian Fard Fini, Perry Forsythe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2020-11-01
Series:Construction Economics and Building
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/7061
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spelling doaj-398aa7ba573c45e585bbe41fac4740922021-02-03T02:36:21ZengUTS ePRESSConstruction Economics and Building2204-90292020-11-0120410.5130/AJCEB.v20i4.7061Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product featuresAlireza Ahmadian Fard Fini0Perry Forsythe1{'en_US': 'University of Technology Sydney'}University of Technology Sydney Within the highly waste-generative context of Australia, waste from demolition of office fit-out significantly contributes to unsustainable landfilling. The extant literature is, however, slim on scrutiny of the situation. Therefore, this study aims to uncover office fit-out demolition processes and product features that drive high ratio of landfilling fit-out elements. The research used ten case projects and fourteen interviews to document visible and latent parameters of office fit-out waste. Waste-stream mapping and decision-tree techniques, in conjunction with basic descriptive statistics, were used to model and visualize the extent and drivers of unsustainable fit-out demolition. Further, an exemplar product features analysis was conducted to validate the identified drivers. The findings show that 78% of fit-out waste from the studied cases is landfilled. This high rate is attributed to both latent and visible factors. The main latent factor is high lease price of premium or high-quality offices which favours expeditious demolition with low consideration for reuse and recycling. Key technically visible barriers are volumetric furniture, heterogeneous fit-out assemblies, and insufficient critical mass. To move away from landfilling, production of office fit-out should be transformed for sustainable material adequacy, product re-configurability and de-constructability, and easy handling in the use phase. https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/7061Office fit-out waste, demolition processes, product features, production for reuse/recycle.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alireza Ahmadian Fard Fini
Perry Forsythe
spellingShingle Alireza Ahmadian Fard Fini
Perry Forsythe
Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
Construction Economics and Building
Office fit-out waste, demolition processes, product features, production for reuse/recycle.
author_facet Alireza Ahmadian Fard Fini
Perry Forsythe
author_sort Alireza Ahmadian Fard Fini
title Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
title_short Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
title_full Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
title_fullStr Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
title_sort barriers to reusing and recycling office fit-out: an exploratory analysis of demolition processes and product features
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Construction Economics and Building
issn 2204-9029
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Within the highly waste-generative context of Australia, waste from demolition of office fit-out significantly contributes to unsustainable landfilling. The extant literature is, however, slim on scrutiny of the situation. Therefore, this study aims to uncover office fit-out demolition processes and product features that drive high ratio of landfilling fit-out elements. The research used ten case projects and fourteen interviews to document visible and latent parameters of office fit-out waste. Waste-stream mapping and decision-tree techniques, in conjunction with basic descriptive statistics, were used to model and visualize the extent and drivers of unsustainable fit-out demolition. Further, an exemplar product features analysis was conducted to validate the identified drivers. The findings show that 78% of fit-out waste from the studied cases is landfilled. This high rate is attributed to both latent and visible factors. The main latent factor is high lease price of premium or high-quality offices which favours expeditious demolition with low consideration for reuse and recycling. Key technically visible barriers are volumetric furniture, heterogeneous fit-out assemblies, and insufficient critical mass. To move away from landfilling, production of office fit-out should be transformed for sustainable material adequacy, product re-configurability and de-constructability, and easy handling in the use phase.
topic Office fit-out waste, demolition processes, product features, production for reuse/recycle.
url https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/7061
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