A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection
Design frequently involves a series of trade-offs to obtain the "optimal" solution to a design problem. Green roofs have many different characteristics based on a variety of variables. Designers typically weigh the impacts of these characteristics in an implicit process based on intuitio...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-294822021-12-07T05:49:56Z A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection Grant, Elizabeth J. Architecture Jones, James R. Schubert, Robert P. Wakefield, Ronald R. Thompson, Theresa M. decision support system Choosing By Advantages green roof Design frequently involves a series of trade-offs to obtain the "optimal" solution to a design problem. Green roofs have many different characteristics based on a variety of variables. Designers typically weigh the impacts of these characteristics in an implicit process based on intuition or past experience. But since vegetated roofing is a relatively complex and comparatively new technology to many practitioners, a rational, explicit method to help organize and rank the trade-offs made during the design process is useful. This research comprises the creation of a framework diagramming the decision process involved in the selection of vegetated roofing systems. Through a series of expert interviews and case studies, the available knowledge is captured and organized to determine the critical parameters affecting design decisions. A set of six case study projects in North America is analyzed and six critically important evaluative categories are identified: storm water management, energy consumption, acoustics, structure, compliance with regulatory guidelines and governmental incentives, and cost. These six factors are key decision-making parameters in the selection of vegetated roofing systems and they form the basis of this study. They are addressed in the context of a decision support system for green roof designers. A summation of the total importance of the advantages represented by each alternative is used to determine the most feasible green roof system for a particular project. The decision-making framework developed in this dissertation will ultimately be adaptable to digital processing and a computer-based design assistance tool. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:18:02Z 2014-03-14T20:18:02Z 2007-10-30 2007-11-06 2007-11-26 2007-11-26 Dissertation etd-11062007-232745 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29482 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11062007-232745/ 01DISSERTATION.pdf 02APPENDIX.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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decision support system Choosing By Advantages green roof |
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decision support system Choosing By Advantages green roof Grant, Elizabeth J. A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
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Design frequently involves a series of trade-offs to obtain the "optimal" solution to a design problem. Green roofs have many different characteristics based on a variety of variables. Designers typically weigh the impacts of these characteristics in an implicit process based on intuition or past experience. But since vegetated roofing is a relatively complex and comparatively new technology to many practitioners, a rational, explicit method to help organize and rank the trade-offs made during the design process is useful.
This research comprises the creation of a framework diagramming the decision process involved in the selection of vegetated roofing systems. Through a series of expert interviews and case studies, the available knowledge is captured and organized to determine the critical parameters affecting design decisions. A set of six case study projects in North America is analyzed and six critically important evaluative categories are identified: storm water management, energy consumption, acoustics, structure, compliance with regulatory guidelines and governmental incentives, and cost. These six factors are key decision-making parameters in the selection of vegetated roofing systems and they form the basis of this study. They are addressed in the context of a decision support system for green roof designers. A summation of the total importance of the advantages represented by each alternative is used to determine the most feasible green roof system for a particular project. The decision-making framework developed in this dissertation will ultimately be adaptable to digital processing and a computer-based design assistance tool. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Architecture |
author_facet |
Architecture Grant, Elizabeth J. |
author |
Grant, Elizabeth J. |
author_sort |
Grant, Elizabeth J. |
title |
A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
title_short |
A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
title_full |
A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
title_fullStr |
A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Decision-Making Framework for Vegetated Roofing System Selection |
title_sort |
decision-making framework for vegetated roofing system selection |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29482 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11062007-232745/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT grantelizabethj adecisionmakingframeworkforvegetatedroofingsystemselection AT grantelizabethj decisionmakingframeworkforvegetatedroofingsystemselection |
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1723963667760807936 |