Title: Module 8 Material Resources
1Module 8Material Resources
- BCN 1582
- International Sustainable Development
2Building Materials
3Waste Quantities
4Waste Quantities
Three major waste generation activities
5Waste Quantities
Residential Demolition
National Case study average
6Waste Quantities
Commercial Demolition
Sample Composition of Commercial Demolition
Debris (19 projects in the Pacific Northwest,
R.W. Rhine, Inc., Tacoma, Washington (Franklin
Associates, 1998)).
7Demolition Waste Generation Rates
Vary depending on construction type
8Waste from Construction
- Material Tons Percent of total
- Wood 3.40 46
- Gypsum / drywall 1.88 25
- Mixed debris 1.13 15
- Cardboard 0.40 5
- Metals 0.44 6
- Masonry 0.18 2
- Total 7.43
- Waste generated 7.2lbs/SF
- Construction Waste from a 2,060 sq. ft. Single
Family Home - World Wastes, June, 1994.
9Embodied Energy of Materials
- Material Btu/Lb
- Gravel, stone 7-9
- Lumber 250
- Concrete 667
- Paint 4,288 - 6,514
- Glass 8,852 - 9,743
- Steel, lead 10,188 - 18,730
- Polyethylene, plastic 37,323 - 68,840
- Aluminum 82,368 - 100,235
10Characteristics of Green Materials
- Non-toxic, does no harm to occupants and
environment - Local
- Natural
- Low tech
- Renewable/recyclable/recycled content
- Sustainable managed and harvested
- Awareness of manufacturing impact on environment
- Durable
11Cement
- Cement - lime, silica, iron and alumina gypsum
- Lime 60-66
- Silica, 19-25
- Alumina 3-8
- Magnesia 0-5
- Ferric oxide 1-5
- 0.64 to 1.25 lb. of CO2 per lb. of cement
- Strip mining - bauxite ore, sand, aggregate
12Green Concrete - Fly-Ash
- Substitute 15-25 of cement
- Maximum 40-50 of cement
- Improves workability, reduces water requirements,
increases the strength, reduces permeability and
corrosion - Fly-ash SO2 possible toxicity for interior
- Curing time 72 vs. 28 days
- Increased strength 10-15
- Less cement per unit volume and less concrete per
load per square inch
13QUESTION?
Steel Stud
Wood
- Wood can be recycled or downcycled
- Potentially renewable resource
- Learning curve for installation complete
- Material grading and behavior established
- Steel can be recycled material
- Non-renewable
- Potential yield strength problems in fires
- Thermal transfer
14Forest Issues - General
- 55 of wood is used for fuel, remainder for
lumber, paper, other industrial products - Legal forest products 142 billion/yr
- Consumption per capita 12x greater in industrial
countries compared to developing countries - Wood production is now more efficient (23
1945-1990) - Wood consumption per capita in US declined by 52
since 1990 - New products OSB, particleboard, I-joists use
less wood and more efficiently
15Wood in Construction
- US 40 of roundwood used in construction
- 10 of worlds wood supply used in US
construction - Home floor area per capita in US increased 79 in
last three decades - During construction 10 of wood ends up as waste
in the US - New framing methods (Optimum Value Engineering)
can reduce wood use and waste by 20 - Salvaged wood can be very valuable
- Certified wood Smartwood (Forestry Stewardship
Council) protects forests
16Needed Changes
- Use certified wood or salvaged lumber
- End subsidies to forestry industry
- Recreation 2.6 million jobs 97.8 billion
- Logging 76,000 jobs 3.5 billion
- Subsidies enforce bad practices, artificially
lower prices - Alternative materials steel for framing, cork
for flooring, other sources of fiber (sisel,
jute, hemp, kenaf)
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18Recycled Content - Plastic
19Recycled Plastic Lumber
20Reclaimed Lumber
21Sustainably Harvested Lumber
22Recycled and Low-Toxicity Paints
23Rapidly Renewable Fibers
24Natural Materials - Cork
25Natural Materials - Fibers
26Recycled Content - Glass
27RecycledGlass Aggregate
28Rammed Earth
29Steel Framing
30Structure as Finish
31Summer House at KBG
32Depot Kiosk
33Materials Decision Matrix
- First Cost
- Availability (materials/labor)
- Performance (Code/function)
- Aesthetics
- Life-cycle costs
- Green Building Material Criteria
34Availability
- Are green building materials readily available
from a local source? - Trade-offs - obtaining materials that are not
locally available but have environmental
attributes
35Performance
- Structural strength
- Fire resistance
- Insect resistance
- Durability and expected life-time
- Installation requirements
- Climate
- Energy
- Code acceptance
36Life-Cycle Costs
- Green building products are often perceived to be
of lesser quality and/or of higher cost - Savings in reduced energy costs, water use,
maintenance and repair, etc., provide a return on
investment competitive with other investment
alternatives - Also recover added value in sale of building
(equity) - ex. high R- value insulation - wear resistant
materials - recycled, recyclable, salvage or
disposal costs or benefits high-quality and
hand-crafted materials acquire value
37CD Waste Reduction
- Waste audit identify wastes and ways to reduce
or reuse - Change dimensioning to reduce cut-off waste?
- Substitute with recyclable/recycled content
material? - Markets and service providers
- Who is available to provide materials, recover
and reuse wastes? - Local disposal fees
- Reuse and recycle on-site demolition material
for site fill, non-structural aggregates, etc.
eliminate transportation - Off-site reuse and recycling
38Linear and Cyclical Processes
39Discussions?