Sustainable Planning & Architecture
Sustainable Planning & Architecture
ARCHITECTURE
UNIT III
1. Selection of materials Eco building materials and
construction
2. Biomimicry, Low impact construction, and
recyclable products and embodied energy.
3. Life cycle analysis
4. Energy sources -Renewable and non-renewable
energy
LIFE CYCLE ANALYSIS
UNIT III
Life cycle Assessment
• Life-cycle assessment (LCA, also known as life-cycle analysis, eco
balance, and cradle-to-grave analysis) is a technique to assess
environmental impacts associated with all the stages of a
product's life from-cradle-to-grave (i.e., from raw material extraction
through materials processing, manufacture, distribution, use, repair and
maintenance, and disposal or recycling). LCAs can help avoid a narrow
outlook on environmental concerns by:
• Compiling an inventory of relevant energy and material inputs and
environmental releases;
• Evaluating the potential impacts associated with identified inputs and
releases;
• Interpreting the results to help make a more informed decision.
The goal of LCA is to compare the full range of environmental effects
assignable to products and services in order to improve processes,
support policy and provide a sound basis for informed decisions.
METHODOLOGY
• According to the ISO standards, a
Life Cycle Assessment is carried
out in four distinct phases as
illustrated in the figure shown to
the right.
• The phases are often
interdependent in that the
results of one phase will inform
how other phases are completed.
Goal and scope
• It starts with an explicit statement of the goal and scope of the
study, which sets out the context of the study and explains how and
to whom the results are to be communicated.
• This is a key step and the ISO standards require that the goal and
scope of an LCA be clearly defined and consistent with the
intended application.
• The goal and scope document therefore includes technical details
that guide subsequent work:
▫ the functional unit, which defines what precisely is being
studied and quantifies the service delivered by the product
system, providing a reference to which the inputs and outputs
can be related. Further, the functional unit is an important basis
that enables alternative goods, or services, to be compared
and analyzed.
▫ the system boundaries;
▫ any assumptions and limitations;
▫ the allocation methods used to partition the environmental
load of a process when several products or functions share the
same process; and
▫ the impact categories chosen.
Life cycle inventory
• Life Cycle Inventory (LCI) analysis involves creating an inventory of
flows from and to nature for a product system.
• Inventory flows include inputs of water, energy, and raw materials,
and releases to air, land, and water.
• To develop the inventory, a flow model of the technical system is
constructed using data on inputs and outputs. The flow model is typically
illustrated with a flow chart that includes the activities that are going to be
assessed in the relevant supply chain and gives a clear picture of the
technical system boundaries. The input and output data needed for the
construction of the model are collected for all activities within the system
boundary, including from the supply chain (referred to as inputs from the
techno-sphere).
• The data must be related to the functional unit defined in the goal and
scope definition. Data can be presented in tables and some interpretations
can be made already at this stage.
Single Stage Flow Diagram
• The following diagram contains inputs and outputs
to be quantified in a single stage or unit operation
▫ see EPA Life-Cycle Design Guidance Manual, EPA Report no. EPA/600/R-
92/226, page 104
Product Material
Inputs (including
reuse & recycle from Reuse/Recycle
another stage) Single Stage or Unit
Operation
Primary Product
Useful Co-product
Fugitive &
Untreated
Waste Waste
Reuse/Recycle
• The results of the inventory is an LCI which provides information about
all inputs and outputs in the form of elementary flow to and from
the environment from all the unit processes involved in the study.
• Inventory flows can number in the hundreds depending on the system
boundary.
• For product LCAs at either the generic (i.e., representative industry
averages) or brand-specific level, that data is typically collected
through survey questionnaires.
• At an industry level, care has to be taken to ensure that
questionnaires are completed by a representative sample of
producers, leaning toward neither the best nor the worst, and fully
representing any regional differences due to energy use, material
sourcing or other factors.
• The questionnaires cover the full range of inputs and outputs,
typically aiming to account for 99% of the mass of a product, 99% of the
energy used in its production and any environmentally sensitive flows,
even if they fall within the 1% level of inputs.
Problems with Inventory Analysis
• The inventory phase usually takes a great deal of time and
effort and mistakes are easily made.
• Mass and energy balances are not correct and defy laws of
thermodynamics.