Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
By T A Vijayasanan
Contents
Introduction
The input and output elements for a building include materials, energy, natural
resources like water, consumer goods, waste, etc.
These input and output elements have diverse environmental implications
Lack of knowledge about the impact of design on the environment and a lack of
enthusiasm among many architects to adopt sustainable methods
A probable reason for the lack of popularity of sustainable design is the highinitial costs of design and construction
Why is it important?
The sheer magnitude of buildings that have being constructed in every part of the
world, magnifies the impact architecture has on the environment
Also, the rapid urbanization, especially in developing countries
The effect of high concentration of built forms in urban settings add up on the
environment
The issue of environmental degradation due to built form, is critical because, its
ill-effects drastically minimized by adhering to strong design principles, common
sense & technological innovation
The first step is to understand the impact of built form and human habitation on
the environment
A review of the relevant literature and research works in the field of sustainable
architecture/ eco-design
A look into the principles, strategies and techniques adopted by sustainable
architectural practices
to present relevant material as an educational module
Historically, building materials like wood, brick, adobe were procured locally
High construction volumes during the last 30 years have drastically depleted
naturally available resources
Ex: due to scarcity of structural lumber, wooden architecture has become a rarity
why do some
buildings sit
lighter than
the others?
Food wastes
Water pollution
Urbanization is a world-wide
phenomenon with over 50% of the world
population living in urban areas
Sub-urban farmlands and forests are
encroached by ever expanding
residential and commercial zones
Green spaces (parks, gardens) are
becoming increasingly scares in urban
areas
Lack of green space deteriorates the
physical, visual and psychological wellbeing of human residents and
immeasurably hurts the local and the
regional eco-system
building
building
materials
energy
output
used materials
wasted heat. CO2, CO,
SO2
water
consumer
goods
waste, recyclable
materials
solar radiation
wind
rainwater
warm air
polluted air
storm water
Energy considerations
Water requirements
Ecological Building
Ecological Building
Ecological Building
Ecological Building
Ecological Building
Ecological Building
The early & mid 20th century is
characterized by:
Urbanization, technological development,
industrialization, concentration of labor in
cities at a frantic pace
Concentration of workplaces in small areas
Shortening of distances for communication
& information
Maximized utilization of available spaces
An architecture & technology that pays no
respect to the environment & energy
consumption
A false sense of Man has overcome
nature
Skyscrapers, fully automated climate
control
Ecological Building
Late 20th century architecture
characterized by:
Renewed search for elegant architectural
solution with respect to energy use,
environment & ventilation
Facades designed for natural ventilation
Creation of climate buffer zones (halls
and atria)
Improved heat insulation & sun
protection
Implementation of energy recovery &
waste treatment systems
Major energy crisis in 1973
Architects, engineers & clients turn to
ECOLOGICAL BUILDING DESIGN
Commerzbank headquarters
in Germany by Architect
Norman Foster uses garden
terraces every 12 floors