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Construction Ecology Module 11

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Title: Construction Ecology Module 11


1
Construction EcologyModule 11
  • Natural metabolism as the basis for intelligent
    architecture
  • Jurgen Bisch

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Basic principles of the intelligence of natural
    metabolism
  • Streamlining and material minimization
  • Energy Efficiency
  • The design process applying the principles the
    achieve efficiency
  • Conclusions

3
Introduction
4
  • Jurgen Bisch presents a very technical, nuts and
    bolts approach to green architecture in this
    module. His philosophy is oriented towards
    practical application.

5
Reflections on progress
  • Recent millennium Opportunities for explosive
    growth were realized through the use of fossil
    fuels and accelerated extraction of materials.
  • Last 50 years Scientist began warning about the
    limits of natural resources and space.
  • Authors reaction Exposure to the cause
    created a new sense of self awareness and
    responsibility to act through architecture.

6
Traditional architectural inspiration
  • Fundamentally, architecture is an applied art.
  • Emerges from a mix of disciplines history,
    philosophy, social science, physics, chemistry,
    psychology, urbanism, and ecology.
  • It evolved from (Greek antiquity) a nature
    philosophy to a split between science and
    philosophy during the Age of Rationalism.

7
The rise of science and industry
  • The post-metaphysical split (Habermas 1988)
  • Material thinking ascended
  • Natural Resources were extracted at an
    accelerated pace
  • Industry developed
  • Architecture focus shifted from the beauty
    oriented European style to the generic glass and
    steel international style

8
Changes in public attitude Trust in Progress
Trust in Production
  • The assembly line made expensive items available
    to middle class families
  • Clever marketing and overproduction spurred the
    replacement of goods in the name of fashion
    before the end of their useful lifespan.
  • Workers became subordinate to the machinery
    design and maintenance to fill the constant demand

9
Social and Intellectual Growth
Production
10
Mechanization and society
  • The social/ecological dilemma we are currently
    consuming resources at an unsustainable rate.
  • Friedman (1975)
  • Current societies act as if material and energy
    limits are problems for future generations to
    manage.
  • What we need is an operations manual for the
    spaceship earth.
  • Jungk (1986)
  • Populations need to think as individuals instead
    of as groups of consumers and voters to act
    responsibly

11
Confronting philosophical responsibility Dont
reinvent the wheel!
  • Natures process have been evolving for millions
    of years, we should not ignore the success of
    proven processes.
  • Architects and engineers in Europe have already
    refined and redefined their aims to more closely
    mimic nature.
  • Aim for more natural metabolic cycles recycle
    and minimize energy use.

12
Confronting Responsibility And Steering
Development
  • On a large scale, the Dow Jones Sustainability
    Index is showing how well environmentally and
    socially responsible companies can perform
  • Dow Jones Sustainability Index

13
Basic principles of the intelligence of natural
metabolism
14
Applying natural metabolism to architecture in
Europe
  • Applicable ideas
  • Streamlining designing only the necessary
    requirements and reducing the buildings material
    impacts.
  • Materials cycling following more natural
    metabolic cycles has led to the use of recycled
    items or items that can be reused or recycled.
  • Minimizing use of raw materials and energy adapt
    construction and design to the regional climate
    to minimize energy use during the operational
    phase.

15
Natural metabolism and society
  • Using the intelligence of natural metabolism in
    architecture results in lower pricing and higher
    living quality standards
  • This demonstration is a introduction into broader
    applications of ideas about efficiency and
    quality of life
  • Intelligent and innovative architecture and
    engineering can create the physical examples that
    will house us more efficiently but also will feed
    our imagination and help us find the red thread
    (the enduring theme) that leads to a higher
    quality, more ecological future. (Bisch, p. 251)

16
Metabolism - streamlining the design
  • Use as little materials as possible through
    intelligent design of long-lasting construction
  • Create simple, elegant designs that endure
    changing fashions
  • Design buildings with flexible uses to make the
    building adaptable to other functions.
  • The resulting buildings will be useful for
    several decades, eliminating the need for
    reconstruction

17
Examples of streamlining in the design process
18
Types of materials
  • A materials (long-life)
  • Load bearing structures, façade, electrical and
    plumbing systems, network system
  • B materials (medium-life)
  • Walls, carpet, suspended ceiling, etc.
  • The most benefit from reduction of material use
    will come from the B materials since they will
    cycle several times during the building life.

19
The activated ceiling system
  • Change the traditional electronic infrastructure
    to an activated ceiling system
  • Integrate ducts into the concrete ceiling
  • Eliminate the need for a suspended ceiling
  • Reduce the total building volume while preserving
    full occupancy space, thus, reducing the amount
    of type A material required for the structure and
    façade of the building

20
Integrating additional volume into the concrete
ceiling
21
Reducing the structural volume of the building by
eliminating the suspended ceiling
22
Applying simple physics to create dynamic
ceilings functions
  • Removal of the suspended ceilings allows the
    concrete ceiling to provide multiple functions
  • The ceiling can hold conduits for plumbing,
    electronic, and fiber optic systems and ducts for
    air and water used for climate control.
  • Air from the occupancy space comes in direct
    contact with the ceiling that is carrying (warm
    or cool) environmental media such as groundwater
  • The thermal gradient is used to control the
    temperature of the building

23
Construction of an activated ceiling
24
Energy efficiency during operation
25
Design using the efficiencies of past and future
centuries
  • Eliminate the need to adjust indoor temperatures
    with fossil fuels or electricity
  • Couple the interior air temperature to the
    buildings thermal mass through the activated
    ceiling
  • Link the buildings thermal mass to the
    environmental media where the desired temperature
    naturally occurs. Examples,
  • Cold groundwater during the summer
  • Three-way mixer of the users heat energy and a
    warm water heating system or solar collector
    during the winter

26
Controlled ventilation
  • Dampening temperature variations and adding
    higher quality natural air to the interior
    without mechanical forcing.
  • Temperature gradients draws air through a ground
    duct to the space between the two exterior
    facades
  • This air provides a temperature buffer and can be
    drawn in to the building by opening a window

27
The earth duct system coupled with the
activated ceiling
28
Energy input reduction
  • Proper design principles achieve interior climate
    control by using mass for support and energy
    storage, primarily with ceiling activation.
  • Design for maximum efficiency by reducing
    exterior mass of building, where temperatures are
    dominated by climate. See sketch 11.1 in text.

29
Selecting materials
  • Aim to minimize energy and material waste by
    replacing quantity with quality and durability.
  • Primarily accomplished in design phase, by
    specifying higher-quality materials and trimming
    material needs.

30
Criteria for choosing sustainable materials
  • Reduce material input.
  • Reduce material diversity, lees chance to
    recycle.
  • Choose materials that are well known, avoid
    high-tech materials.
  • Maximize capacity for reconstruction with current
    materials.
  • Find designs and materials that are traditional
    for the area.
  • Use the Ecological Rucksack as a measure of a
    materials impact.

31
Tools to measure efficiency
  • Ecological Rucksack
  • Measures the impact of resource use
  • The factor 4 concept
  • Linking quantity and quality
  • Increasing efficiency by a factor of 2 will
    double wealth

32
The design process applying the principles to
achieve efficiency
33
Pre-design phase
  • Site assessment
  • Understand climate at site.
  • Become familiar with environmental and aesthetic
    qualities surrounding site. Choose which should
    be preserved and/or enhanced
  • Field crew should make extensive on-site
    measurements.
  • Orient planning team with overall design aims.

34
Table of data collected for site evaluation
  • Temperature-At differing heights
  • Wind-Direction and Speed
  • Sun-Solar curve and constant
  • Ground Water-Elevation
  • Shade-Buildings and Trees
  • Local Atmosphere-Air, noise pollution
  • Soil Qualities

35
Design phase
  • Especially during the design phase, Bisch
    emphasizes the necessity of involvement by the
    stakeholders, the end users of the facility.
  • Similar to Design-Build strategy.
  • Design becomes a cyclical pulsing of creation
    followed by streamlining, with continuous input
    by stakeholders.
  • Finally, the design phase concludes with a
    design quality check. Involves final approval
    by designers and final occupants of the proposed
    building.

36
Lessons Learned
  • Energy input to the building must be carefully
    controlled, usually by shading by trees and other
    foliage.
  • Also, a buildings façade should shed energy, not
    store energy.
  • Active shading involving blinds is also
    encouraged.

37
Conclusions
38
Limits and changes
  • Bisch has discovered that often construction
    materials with low embodied energies are the
    traditional types of materials, and are easy to
    recycle, and whose biological influence on the
    buildings occupants is well known.
  • Also, range of temperatures allowed by HVAC
    system can be expanded to reduce operating costs.

39
Summary
  • This design approach has very traditional basis,
    as Bisch acknowledges.
  • Simpler is often better.
  • Involvement of the end users or occupants
    throughout the design and construction process
    invariably results in a higher quality and more
    satisfactory end product.
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