Document Type

Conference Paper

Rights

Available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike 4.0 International Licence

Disciplines

2. ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY

Publication Details

Proceedings of SECOTOX Conference and the International Conference on Environmental Management, Engineering, Planning and Economics. Skiathos, June 24-28. 2007.

Abstract

Engineering building design focuses on optimising operational energy use and ignores the energy required to procure and construct a building. This energy, termed ‘embodied energy’, can be very significant when compared to operational energy. Therefore, it is important to minimise the embodied in buildings; this must be done at the design stage. This paper presents a comparative embodied energy analysis of two structural design solutions for a modern office building: one in concrete and one in steel. Process analysis is used to determine production, transport and construction energy requirements for all system components. Results indicate that the steel solution has more than two and a half times as much embodied energy as the concrete solution.

Funder

Higher Education Authority TSR Strand 1


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Engineering Commons

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