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Life Cycle Assessment of an Office Building Based on Site-Specific Data

Ylmén, Peter LU ; Peñaloza, Diego and Mjörnell, Kristina LU (2019) In Energies 12(13). p.2588-2588
Abstract
Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an established method to assess the various environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a building. The goal of this project was to calculate the environmental releases for a whole office building and investigate the contribution in terms of environmental impact for different parts of the building, as well as the impact from different stages of the life cycle. The construction process was followed up during production and the contractors provided real-time data on the input required in terms of building products, transport, machinery, energy use, etc. The results are presented for five environmental impact categories and, as expected, materials that constitute the main mass of the building and the... (More)
Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an established method to assess the various environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a building. The goal of this project was to calculate the environmental releases for a whole office building and investigate the contribution in terms of environmental impact for different parts of the building, as well as the impact from different stages of the life cycle. The construction process was followed up during production and the contractors provided real-time data on the input required in terms of building products, transport, machinery, energy use, etc. The results are presented for five environmental impact categories and, as expected, materials that constitute the main mass of the building and the energy used during operation contribute the largest share of environmental impact. It is usually difficult to evaluate the environmental impact of the materials in technical installations due to the lack of data. However, in this study, the data were provided by the contractors directly involved in the construction and can, therefore, be considered highly reliable. The results show that materials for installations have a significant environmental impact for four of the environmental impact categories studied, which is a noteworthy finding (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an established method to assess the various environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a building. The goal of this project was to calculate the environmental releases for a whole office building and investigate the contribution in terms of environmental impact for different parts of the building, as well as the impact from different stages of the life cycle. The construction process was followed up during production and the contractors provided real-time data on the input required in terms of building products, transport, machinery, energy use, etc. The results are presented for five environmental impact categories and, as expected, materials that constitute the main mass of the building and the... (More)
Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an established method to assess the various environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a building. The goal of this project was to calculate the environmental releases for a whole office building and investigate the contribution in terms of environmental impact for different parts of the building, as well as the impact from different stages of the life cycle. The construction process was followed up during production and the contractors provided real-time data on the input required in terms of building products, transport, machinery, energy use, etc. The results are presented for five environmental impact categories and, as expected, materials that constitute the main mass of the building and the energy used during operation contribute the largest share of environmental impact. It is usually difficult to evaluate the environmental impact of the materials in technical installations due to the lack of data. However, in this study, the data were provided by the contractors directly involved in the construction and can, therefore, be considered highly reliable. The results show that materials for installations have a significant environmental impact for four of the environmental impact categories studied, which is a noteworthy finding. (Less)
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author
; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Energies
volume
12
issue
13
pages
11 pages
publisher
MDPI AG
external identifiers
  • scopus:85068750235
ISSN
1996-1073
DOI
10.3390/en12132588
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
f724b824-9562-4f8b-a605-ad575f662db2
date added to LUP
2020-10-07 09:36:26
date last changed
2022-04-19 01:00:35
@article{f724b824-9562-4f8b-a605-ad575f662db2,
  abstract     = {{Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an established method to assess the various environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a building. The goal of this project was to calculate the environmental releases for a whole office building and investigate the contribution in terms of environmental impact for different parts of the building, as well as the impact from different stages of the life cycle. The construction process was followed up during production and the contractors provided real-time data on the input required in terms of building products, transport, machinery, energy use, etc. The results are presented for five environmental impact categories and, as expected, materials that constitute the main mass of the building and the energy used during operation contribute the largest share of environmental impact. It is usually difficult to evaluate the environmental impact of the materials in technical installations due to the lack of data. However, in this study, the data were provided by the contractors directly involved in the construction and can, therefore, be considered highly reliable. The results show that materials for installations have a significant environmental impact for four of the environmental impact categories studied, which is a noteworthy finding}},
  author       = {{Ylmén, Peter and Peñaloza, Diego and Mjörnell, Kristina}},
  issn         = {{1996-1073}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  number       = {{13}},
  pages        = {{2588--2588}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  series       = {{Energies}},
  title        = {{Life Cycle Assessment of an Office Building Based on Site-Specific Data}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en12132588}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/en12132588}},
  volume       = {{12}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}