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Reimagining a circular building sector 2035 – Futures with zero new construction

Kyrö, Riikka LU ; Lundgren, Rebecka LU ; Toivonen, Saija and Tähtinen, Lassi (2024) Futures Conference 2024
Abstract
The building sector is the single largest consumer of natural resources, accounting for a staggering half of global material use and over a third of energy use and carbon emissions. As a response, the circular transition in the building sector has been focused on strategies such as extracting material from demolished buildings, and design-for-disassembly in new construction projects. Sadly, significant resource loss occurs in these type of ineffective recycling processes. Moreover, strategies for new construction fit poorly with the urgency of the sustainability crises. More efficient use of existing buildings would result in a more immediate reduction in the net consumption of resources. Many existing buildings may be functionally or... (More)
The building sector is the single largest consumer of natural resources, accounting for a staggering half of global material use and over a third of energy use and carbon emissions. As a response, the circular transition in the building sector has been focused on strategies such as extracting material from demolished buildings, and design-for-disassembly in new construction projects. Sadly, significant resource loss occurs in these type of ineffective recycling processes. Moreover, strategies for new construction fit poorly with the urgency of the sustainability crises. More efficient use of existing buildings would result in a more immediate reduction in the net consumption of resources. Many existing buildings may be functionally or locationally obsolete but hold major potential in terms of resource efficiency. We therefore imagine a circular future for the building sector in 2035, with zero new construction. The imagined futures are, as follows: 1) rural hubs are the most common workplaces outside of homes; 2) virtual and hybrid spaces are the most common workplaces overall; 3) the remaining corporate offices are in collaborative use; 4) offices are adapted to residential use; 5) temporary creative use thrives, and 6) vertical extension, and; 7) relocation of existing buildings are the norm. Consequently, we engage in seven backcasting workshops, each with 4-5 topic experts. We make use of the PESTE framework and guide the experts to explore which political, economic, social, technological, or environmental developments took place in 2030 and 2025, respectively, for the image to realize in 2035. Our findings comprise insights into actions and actors needed to reach the seven preferable futures to sustain our planets finite resources. We offer a novel outlook for policy makers and building industry professionals as they navigate the green and circular transition. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
adaptive reuse, relocation, collaborative spaces, vertical extension, Virtual space
conference name
Futures Conference 2024
conference location
Turku, Finland
conference dates
2024-06-13 - 2024-06-14
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
866bdc15-3cc6-4b8a-b8dd-bfe86945870f
alternative location
https://futuresconference2024.com/session-programme/#:~:text=Book%20of%20Abstracts%20(pdf)
date added to LUP
2024-07-02 15:11:21
date last changed
2024-08-05 15:55:00
@misc{866bdc15-3cc6-4b8a-b8dd-bfe86945870f,
  abstract     = {{The building sector is the single largest consumer of natural resources, accounting for a staggering half of global material use and over a third of energy use and carbon emissions. As a response, the circular transition in the building sector has been focused on strategies such as extracting material from demolished buildings, and design-for-disassembly in new construction projects. Sadly, significant resource loss occurs in these type of ineffective recycling processes. Moreover, strategies for new construction fit poorly with the urgency of the sustainability crises. More efficient use of existing buildings would result in a more immediate reduction in the net consumption of resources. Many existing buildings may be functionally or locationally obsolete but hold major potential in terms of resource efficiency. We therefore imagine a circular future for the building sector in 2035, with zero new construction. The imagined futures are, as follows: 1) rural hubs are the most common workplaces outside of homes; 2) virtual and hybrid spaces are the most common workplaces overall; 3) the remaining corporate offices are in collaborative use; 4) offices are adapted to residential use; 5) temporary creative use thrives, and 6) vertical extension, and; 7) relocation of existing buildings are the norm. Consequently, we engage in seven backcasting workshops, each with 4-5 topic experts. We make use of the PESTE framework and guide the experts to explore which political, economic, social, technological, or environmental developments took place in 2030 and 2025, respectively, for the image to realize in 2035. Our findings comprise insights into actions and actors needed to reach the seven preferable futures to sustain our planets finite resources. We offer a novel outlook for policy makers and building industry professionals as they navigate the green and circular transition.}},
  author       = {{Kyrö, Riikka and Lundgren, Rebecka and Toivonen, Saija and Tähtinen, Lassi}},
  keywords     = {{adaptive reuse; relocation; collaborative spaces; vertical extension; Virtual space}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Reimagining a circular building sector 2035 – Futures with zero new construction}},
  url          = {{https://futuresconference2024.com/session-programme/#:~:text=Book%20of%20Abstracts%20(pdf)}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}