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A Swedish Perspective on the Prevention of Moisture Problems During the Building's Design Phase

Burke, Stephen LU and Yverås, Veronica (2004) In Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate Research 1(1). p.102-113
Abstract
Moisture problems in buildings are increasingly being reported in the mass media in Sweden, often leading to some controversial stories about companies and their building processes. Using building physics and building performance principles during the design stage can often prevent most problems from occurring. One of the big questions is, with

all the available knowledge about designing a building, how can these problems still be occurring in new buildings? This paper explores this question by interviewing some engineering consultants on how they evaluate the performance of a building, and to what extent knowledge

about building physics theory is being used during the design process to prevent moisture problems from... (More)
Moisture problems in buildings are increasingly being reported in the mass media in Sweden, often leading to some controversial stories about companies and their building processes. Using building physics and building performance principles during the design stage can often prevent most problems from occurring. One of the big questions is, with

all the available knowledge about designing a building, how can these problems still be occurring in new buildings? This paper explores this question by interviewing some engineering consultants on how they evaluate the performance of a building, and to what extent knowledge

about building physics theory is being used during the design process to prevent moisture problems from occurring. It was found that building physics is not used extensively in the building industry due to many reasons. The lack of good design tools and the fact that clients do not request it are two main reasons. However, it was revealed that clients do not request it because they either have no interest in spending the extra money for a better design, or they do not know it is optional and just assume everything is taken account of in the final design. Furthermore, the consultants do not advise them on the available options applicable for their particular design. Due to the method used to analyse the interviews, an unexpected relationship between education level and their perceived level of awareness of building performance issues emerged. It appears that the higher the level of education of the consultant, the more they are aware of the impact of

performance issues in a building’s design. Their experience level does not appear significant in this relationship, however this cannot be proven and will require more studies to verify. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
and economics, consultants, interviews, building physics, education, building performance, tools
in
Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate Research
volume
1
issue
1
pages
102 - 113
publisher
The Finnish Society of Surveying Sciences
ISSN
1459-5877
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ef8e9faa-88b4-4fee-bbcb-d9460da7e482 (old id 833631)
alternative location
http://mts.fgi.fi/
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:16:45
date last changed
2020-02-05 11:01:48
@article{ef8e9faa-88b4-4fee-bbcb-d9460da7e482,
  abstract     = {{Moisture problems in buildings are increasingly being reported in the mass media in Sweden, often leading to some controversial stories about companies and their building processes. Using building physics and building performance principles during the design stage can often prevent most problems from occurring. One of the big questions is, with<br/><br>
all the available knowledge about designing a building, how can these problems still be occurring in new buildings? This paper explores this question by interviewing some engineering consultants on how they evaluate the performance of a building, and to what extent knowledge<br/><br>
about building physics theory is being used during the design process to prevent moisture problems from occurring. It was found that building physics is not used extensively in the building industry due to many reasons. The lack of good design tools and the fact that clients do not request it are two main reasons. However, it was revealed that clients do not request it because they either have no interest in spending the extra money for a better design, or they do not know it is optional and just assume everything is taken account of in the final design. Furthermore, the consultants do not advise them on the available options applicable for their particular design. Due to the method used to analyse the interviews, an unexpected relationship between education level and their perceived level of awareness of building performance issues emerged. It appears that the higher the level of education of the consultant, the more they are aware of the impact of<br/><br>
performance issues in a building’s design. Their experience level does not appear significant in this relationship, however this cannot be proven and will require more studies to verify.}},
  author       = {{Burke, Stephen and Yverås, Veronica}},
  issn         = {{1459-5877}},
  keywords     = {{and economics; consultants; interviews; building physics; education; building performance; tools}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{102--113}},
  publisher    = {{The Finnish Society of Surveying Sciences}},
  series       = {{Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate Research}},
  title        = {{A Swedish Perspective on the Prevention of Moisture Problems During the Building's Design Phase}},
  url          = {{http://mts.fgi.fi/}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}