Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment

abstract: Today, we use resources faster than they can be replaced. Construction consumes more resources than any other industry and has one of the largest waste streams. Resource consumption and waste generation are expected to grow as the global population increases. The circular economy (CE) is b...

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Other Authors: Campos da Cruz Rios, Fernanda (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50567
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-505672018-10-02T03:01:11Z Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment abstract: Today, we use resources faster than they can be replaced. Construction consumes more resources than any other industry and has one of the largest waste streams. Resource consumption and waste generation are expected to grow as the global population increases. The circular economy (CE) is based on the concept of a closed-loop cycle (CLC) and proposes a solution that, in theory, can eliminate the environmental impacts caused by construction and demolition (C&D) waste and increase the efficiency of resources’ use. In a CLC, building materials are reused, remanufactured, recycled, and reintegrated into other buildings (or into other sectors) without creating any waste. Designing out waste is the core principle of the CE. Design for disassembly or design for deconstruction (DfD) is the practice of planning the future deconstruction of a building and the reuse of its materials. Concepts like DfD, CE, and product-service systems (PSS) can work together to promote CLC in the built environment. PSS are business models based on stewardship instead of ownership. CE combines DfD, PSS, materials’ durability, and materials’ reuse in multiple life cycles to promote a low-carbon, regenerative economy. CE prioritizes reuse over recycling. Dealing with resource scarcity demands us to think beyond the incremental changes from recycling waste; it demands an urgent, systemic, and radical change in the way we design, build, and procure construction materials. This dissertation aims to answer three research questions: 1) How can researchers estimate the environmental benefits of reusing building components, 2) What variables are susceptible to affect the environmental impact assessment of reuse, and 3) What are the barriers and opportunities for DfD and materials’ reuse in the current design practice in the United States. The first part of this study investigated how different life cycle assessment (LCA) methods (i.e., hybrid LCA and process-based LCA), assumptions (e.g., reuse rates, transportation distances, number of reuses), and LCA timelines can affect the results of a closed-loop LCA. The second part of this study built on interviews with architects in the United States to understand why DfD is not part of the current design practice in the country. Dissertation/Thesis Campos da Cruz Rios, Fernanda (Author) Grau, David (Advisor) Chong, Oswald (Advisor) Grau, David (Committee member) Chong, Oswald (Committee member) Parrish, Kristen (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Engineering Architecture Building materials Circular economy Design for disassembly Life cycle assessment Recycling Reuse eng 161 pages Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50567 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Engineering
Architecture
Building materials
Circular economy
Design for disassembly
Life cycle assessment
Recycling
Reuse
spellingShingle Sustainability
Engineering
Architecture
Building materials
Circular economy
Design for disassembly
Life cycle assessment
Recycling
Reuse
Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
description abstract: Today, we use resources faster than they can be replaced. Construction consumes more resources than any other industry and has one of the largest waste streams. Resource consumption and waste generation are expected to grow as the global population increases. The circular economy (CE) is based on the concept of a closed-loop cycle (CLC) and proposes a solution that, in theory, can eliminate the environmental impacts caused by construction and demolition (C&D) waste and increase the efficiency of resources’ use. In a CLC, building materials are reused, remanufactured, recycled, and reintegrated into other buildings (or into other sectors) without creating any waste. Designing out waste is the core principle of the CE. Design for disassembly or design for deconstruction (DfD) is the practice of planning the future deconstruction of a building and the reuse of its materials. Concepts like DfD, CE, and product-service systems (PSS) can work together to promote CLC in the built environment. PSS are business models based on stewardship instead of ownership. CE combines DfD, PSS, materials’ durability, and materials’ reuse in multiple life cycles to promote a low-carbon, regenerative economy. CE prioritizes reuse over recycling. Dealing with resource scarcity demands us to think beyond the incremental changes from recycling waste; it demands an urgent, systemic, and radical change in the way we design, build, and procure construction materials. This dissertation aims to answer three research questions: 1) How can researchers estimate the environmental benefits of reusing building components, 2) What variables are susceptible to affect the environmental impact assessment of reuse, and 3) What are the barriers and opportunities for DfD and materials’ reuse in the current design practice in the United States. The first part of this study investigated how different life cycle assessment (LCA) methods (i.e., hybrid LCA and process-based LCA), assumptions (e.g., reuse rates, transportation distances, number of reuses), and LCA timelines can affect the results of a closed-loop LCA. The second part of this study built on interviews with architects in the United States to understand why DfD is not part of the current design practice in the country. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018
author2 Campos da Cruz Rios, Fernanda (Author)
author_facet Campos da Cruz Rios, Fernanda (Author)
title Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
title_short Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
title_full Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
title_fullStr Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Recycling: Design for Disassembly, Reuse, and Circular Economy in the Built Environment
title_sort beyond recycling: design for disassembly, reuse, and circular economy in the built environment
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50567
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