A Guiding Vision, Road Map, And Principles For Researching And Teaching Sustainable Design And Construction
Author(s) -
Karen Lee Hansen,
Jorge A. Vanegas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
papers on engineering education repository (american society for engineering education)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--1022
Subject(s) - sustainability , plan (archaeology) , sustainable development , resource efficiency , resource (disambiguation) , sustainable design , architecture , process management , engineering , business , computer science , ecology , archaeology , biology , political science , law , history , art , visual arts , computer network
The Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (A/E/C) industry plays a critical role in delivering a diverse range of Facilities and Civil Infrastructure Systems (F&CIS), including residential, building, industrial facilities, and transportation, energy, water supply, waste management, and communications systems. It also plays a critical role in maintaining their quality, integrity, and longevity. At the same time, the A/E/C industry contributes to natural resource depletion, waste generation and accumulation, and environmental impact and degradation. Traditional approaches of environmental regulatory compliance, or of reactive corrective actions to slow, reduce, and eliminate these impacts have proven to be consistently costly, inefficient and often ineffective. In response, a wide range of constituencies from both within and outside the A/E/C industry have been attempting to define the attributes and characteristics of sustainable F&CIS, the processes for the sustainable delivery and use of F&CIS, and the resources required for the delivery and use of F&CIS in a sustainable way. In a sustainable approach to F&CIS, decision-makers need to integrate sustainability at all stages of the project life cycle, particularly the early funding allocation, planning and conceptual design phases. More specifically, to be successful in the pursuit of sustainability, the A/E/C industry needs to: (1) define, plan, and design more sustainable F&CIS; (2) procure, construct, commission, operate, and maintain F&CIS in more sustainable ways; and (3) supply more sustainable building technologies, systems, products and materials used within F&CIS. Satisfying these needs require a new paradigm, anchored in three elements: the first is a vision for sustainability at global, industry, and project levels; the second is an implementation road map at strategic, tactical, and operational levels; and the third is a set of specific sustainability principles, which provide the foundation for the vision and road map. The challenges posed by this paradigm are, among others: (1) sustainability is a very complex domain; (2) the literature on built environment sustainability is rich, extensive, and diverse; and (3) many academic institutions have active and mature education and research programs on built environment sustainability that have evolved over years of work and with a significant amount of sponsored research investment. So the questions for educators and researchers who may be interested in establishing education and research programs in sustainable F&CIS are: What can be done? How can it be done? With what resources can it be done? This paper proposes answers to these three questions, as a starting point for an on going, industry-wide dialogue.
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