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Global or local construction materials for post-disaster reconstruction? Sustainability assessment of 20 post-disaster shelter designs
Author(s) -
Edwin Zea Escamilla,
Guillaume Habert
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
data in brief
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.122
H-Index - 30
ISSN - 2352-3409
DOI - 10.1016/j.dib.2015.05.027
Subject(s) - life cycle assessment , sustainability , production (economics) , disaster area , civil engineering , building information modeling , brick , environmental resource management , transport engineering , environmental science , computer science , environmental planning , business , engineering , geography , operations management , meteorology , ecology , macroeconomics , scheduling (production processes) , economics , biology
This data article presents the life cycle inventories of 20 transitional shelter solutions. The data was gathered from the reports 8 shelter designs [1]; 10 post-disaster shelter designs [2]; the environmental impact of brick production outside of Europe [3]; and the optimization of bamboo-based post-disaster housing units for tropical and subtropical regions using LCA methodologies [4]. These reports include bill of quantities, plans, performance analysis, and lifespan of the studied shelters. The data from these reports was used to develop the Life Cycle Inventories (LCI). All the amounts were converted from their original units (length, volume and amount) into mass (kg) units and the transport distance into ton×km. These LCIs represent the production phases of each shelter and the transportation distances for the construction materials. Two types of distances were included, local (road) and international (freight ship), which were estimated based on the area of the country of study. Furthermore, the digital visualization of the shelters is presented for each of the 20 designs. Moreover, this data article presents a summary of the results for the categories Environment, Cost and Risk and the contribution to the environmental impact from the different building components of each shelter. These results are related to the article "Global or local construction materials for post-disaster reconstruction? Sustainability assessment of 20 post-disaster shelter designs"[5].

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