An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction
Wooden type of housing is ubiquitous in Japan. It is the main structure for housing; however, due to the increase in residential developments, steel reinforced concrete houses are also on the rise. This paper assesses the environmental impacts of these two types of construction. An evaluation of the...
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oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-67602022-06-02T00:19:26Z An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction Gerilla, Gloria P. Teknomo, Kardi Hokao, Kazunori Wooden type of housing is ubiquitous in Japan. It is the main structure for housing; however, due to the increase in residential developments, steel reinforced concrete houses are also on the rise. This paper assesses the environmental impacts of these two types of construction. An evaluation of the two types of construction in terms of energy usage and air emissions is done. A comparison of the damage costs due to the generated emissions is also considered. Four types of emissions generated are evaluated, namely carbon emissions (CO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur oxides (SOx) and suspended particulate matter (SPM). The life cycle of the two different housing construction types is traced and environmental impacts are determined. External costs are also calculated. Furthermore, different improvement assessment scenarios are simulated to ascertain several emission reduction possibilities. The study looks into the emitted emissions from the housing construction to its final disposal of a typical residential development in Saga, Japan. Results show that much of the environmental impacts from building a house are on the Global Warming Potential due to high carbon emissions. Moreover, the construction phase generated the highest pollutant emissions from nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides and suspended particulate matter. Steel reinforced concrete (SRC) construction has a higher environmental impact compared to the wooden type of housing construction. A longer design life for a residential house gives a reduction of about 14% in carbon emissions. Using solar energy for the operation phase has gained a reduction of 73% in the total life cycle carbon emissions. 2007-07-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/6112 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Wood—Environmental testing Reinforced concrete—Environmental testing Sustainable development Environmental impact analysis Product life cycle Civil and Environmental Engineering |
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Wood—Environmental testing Reinforced concrete—Environmental testing Sustainable development Environmental impact analysis Product life cycle Civil and Environmental Engineering Gerilla, Gloria P. Teknomo, Kardi Hokao, Kazunori An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
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Wooden type of housing is ubiquitous in Japan. It is the main structure for housing; however, due to the increase in residential developments, steel reinforced concrete houses are also on the rise. This paper assesses the environmental impacts of these two types of construction. An evaluation of the two types of construction in terms of energy usage and air emissions is done. A comparison of the damage costs due to the generated emissions is also considered. Four types of emissions generated are evaluated, namely carbon emissions (CO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur oxides (SOx) and suspended particulate matter (SPM). The life cycle of the two different housing construction types is traced and environmental impacts are determined. External costs are also calculated. Furthermore, different improvement assessment scenarios are simulated to ascertain several emission reduction possibilities. The study looks into the emitted emissions from the housing construction to its final disposal of a typical residential development in Saga, Japan. Results show that much of the environmental impacts from building a house are on the Global Warming Potential due to high carbon emissions. Moreover, the construction phase generated the highest pollutant emissions from nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides and suspended particulate matter. Steel reinforced concrete (SRC) construction has a higher environmental impact compared to the wooden type of housing construction. A longer design life for a residential house gives a reduction of about 14% in carbon emissions. Using solar energy for the operation phase has gained a reduction of 73% in the total life cycle carbon emissions. |
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text |
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Gerilla, Gloria P. Teknomo, Kardi Hokao, Kazunori |
author_facet |
Gerilla, Gloria P. Teknomo, Kardi Hokao, Kazunori |
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Gerilla, Gloria P. |
title |
An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
title_short |
An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
title_full |
An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
title_fullStr |
An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
title_full_unstemmed |
An environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
title_sort |
environmental assessment of wood and steel reinforced concrete housing construction |
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Animo Repository |
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2007 |
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https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/6112 |
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