Sustainability is a
concern that must also be addressed by structural engineers. Structural
engineers must be able to discriminate as to which materials and processes
would have a lesser impact to the environment, and to coordinate with the other
stakeholders of the structure. The concept of the study is to enable the
structural engineer to analyse the sustainability of structural systems in a
quantifiable manner.
In
designing a house, or any structure, there are three things commonly considered
by the structural engineer. Namely: safety, serviceability and cost. Safety and
serviceability ensure that the structure can fulfill its intended purpose by
satisfying code requirements on strength, ductility and deflections. Addressing
economy, on the other hand, requires value engineering to produce an optimum
design with reasonable cost. There is now an increasing concern about the
environmental impact of structures. Sustainable design of houses must be
pursued to address this concern. But what parameter may be used to guide
structural designers to make their structures “greener”?
In an undergraduate thesis, the environmental
impact of the structural systems and envelope of selected housing units for a
middle class family in the Philippines
using Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) was conducted.
The five environmental impact parameters: (a) Global Warming Potential,
(b) Ocean Acidification, (c) Abiotic Material Depletion, (d) Energy Use, (e)
Human Toxicity were assessed considering the manufacturing and disposal stage as the system boundary in the LCA study. A “Structural Sustainability Index” or SSI
which produces a single score aggregating the five impacts was derived by
assigning weights based on an expert’s survey for each environmental impact
indicator. The SSI can be used for ranking houses based on environmental impact
and can be used as a parameter to guide structural engineers in comparing
various design alternatives and selecting
“greener
designs”.
The image below is a poster submitted to the ASEP Student Research Competition during the 16th ASEP International Conference held on May 23-25, 2013.
Nice way to explain Structural Engineering
ReplyDeleteInovative idea!!
Thanks for the comment, Peter Barrow.
ReplyDelete