“Adaptive reuse refers to the practice of repurposing existing buildings for new functions, rather than demolishing and constructing new structures. One of the key benefits of adaptive reuse is the preservation of embodied energy.
Globally, construction is responsible for 39% of carbon emissions, with 28% coming from operational costs and eleven per cent coming from embodied carbon during the construction phase. Although operational costs are higher, the savings accumulate over time.
For embodied carbon during the construction phase, in contrast, the carbon costs are all paid upfront. Reducing emissions right now is vitally important to tackling the climate crisis, so there needs to be extra emphasis on addressing the embodied carbon in buildings to deliver carbon reductions quickly.
By reusing existing structures, we conserve this embodied energy invested in their original construction. Constructing a new building requires a substantial amount of energy and resources, including raw materials, transportation, and manufacturing processes. Over 60 per cent of embodied carbon in a building is contained in the sub-structure, frame, upper floors and roof of a building.
As most of these elements can be reused or repurposed in a refurbished building, adaptive reuse drastically reduces the upfront carbon cost in comparison with demolishing the structure and building a new one in its place. Furthermore, demolishing existing buildings generates immense amounts of waste materials and the disposal of construction debris contributes to pollution.
As well as the sustainability benefits, by repurposing existing structures, architects, developers and engineers can contribute to the revitalisation or urban areas, reducing urban sprawl and the need for new infrastructure development. However, this last point in particular often creates a need for effective vibration control.
Buildings situated in built up urban areas, London in particular, are often located in proximity to major sources of noise and vibration, such as train and tube lines. This is especially problematic for historic buildings, which were designed in a different era where modern acoustic engineering was neither available nor necessary.
It might seem that the need for effective vibration control rules out the possibility of adaptive reuse in some scenarios. Imagine, for example, an historic building in proximity to a major tube or train line. The developers might envisage repurposing the existing building into a luxury hotel, but with vibration from the train being transmitted into the buildings structure, the occupants will inevitably face an intolerable level of noise.
Although structural isolation is more common, and certainly easier, for new buildings, it is also possible for existing buildings, including historic ones.
Adaptive reuse is a key strategy for helping reduce the environmental impact of the built environment. In urban areas, effective structural isolation of existing buildings will be key to making it viable in many instances.”
The latest Builders Merchant Building Index (BMBI) report shows builders’ merchants’ value sales in October were up +1.2% compared to the same month last year.
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