Detail publikačního výsledku

Life-Cycle Assessment of a Rural Terraced House: A Struggle with Sustainability of Building Renovations

STRUHALA, K.; OSTRÝ, M.

Originální název

Life-Cycle Assessment of a Rural Terraced House: A Struggle with Sustainability of Building Renovations

Anglický název

Life-Cycle Assessment of a Rural Terraced House: A Struggle with Sustainability of Building Renovations

Druh

Článek WoS

Originální abstrakt

Contemporary research stresses the need to reduce mankind’s environmental impacts and achieve sustainability. One of the keys to this is the construction sector. New buildings have to comply with strict limits regarding resource consumption (energy, water use, etc.). However, they make up only a fraction of the existing building stock. Renovations of existing buildings are therefore essential for the reduction of the environmental impacts in the construction sector. This paper illustrates the situation using a case study of a rural terraced house in a village near Brno, Czech Republic. It compares the life-cycle assessment (LCA) of the original house and its proposed renovation as well as demolition followed by new construction. The LCA covers both the initial embodied environmental impacts (EEIs) and the 60-year operation of the house with several variants of energy sources. The results show that the proposed renovation would reduce overall environmental impacts (OEIs) of the house by up to 90% and the demolition and new construction by up to 93% depending on the selected energy sources. As such, the results confirm the importance of renovations and the installation of environmentally-friendly energy sources for achieving sustainability in the construction sector. They also show the desirability of the replacement of inefficient old buildings by new construction in specific cases

Anglický abstrakt

Contemporary research stresses the need to reduce mankind’s environmental impacts and achieve sustainability. One of the keys to this is the construction sector. New buildings have to comply with strict limits regarding resource consumption (energy, water use, etc.). However, they make up only a fraction of the existing building stock. Renovations of existing buildings are therefore essential for the reduction of the environmental impacts in the construction sector. This paper illustrates the situation using a case study of a rural terraced house in a village near Brno, Czech Republic. It compares the life-cycle assessment (LCA) of the original house and its proposed renovation as well as demolition followed by new construction. The LCA covers both the initial embodied environmental impacts (EEIs) and the 60-year operation of the house with several variants of energy sources. The results show that the proposed renovation would reduce overall environmental impacts (OEIs) of the house by up to 90% and the demolition and new construction by up to 93% depending on the selected energy sources. As such, the results confirm the importance of renovations and the installation of environmentally-friendly energy sources for achieving sustainability in the construction sector. They also show the desirability of the replacement of inefficient old buildings by new construction in specific cases

Klíčová slova

Building renovation; environmental impacts; energy efficiency, energy sources; Life-Cycle Assessment; sustainable construction

Klíčová slova v angličtině

Building renovation; environmental impacts; energy efficiency, energy sources; Life-Cycle Assessment; sustainable construction

Autoři

STRUHALA, K.; OSTRÝ, M.

Rok RIV

2021

Vydáno

26.04.2021

Nakladatel

MDPI

Místo

Switzerland

ISSN

1996-1073

Periodikum

Energies

Svazek

14

Číslo

9

Stát

Švýcarská konfederace

Strany od

1

Strany do

18

Strany počet

18

URL

Plný text v Digitální knihovně

BibTex

@article{BUT171014,
  author="Karel {Struhala} and Milan {Ostrý}",
  title="Life-Cycle Assessment of a Rural Terraced House: A Struggle with Sustainability of Building Renovations",
  journal="Energies",
  year="2021",
  volume="14",
  number="9",
  pages="1--18",
  doi="10.3390/en14092472",
  url="https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/9/2472/htm"
}

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