Treffer: Assessment of CO2 Emissions Reduction in High-Rise Concrete Office Buildings Using Different Material-Use Options

Title:
Assessment of CO2 Emissions Reduction in High-Rise Concrete Office Buildings Using Different Material-Use Options
Source:
Handbook of Low Carbon Concrete ISBN: 9780128045244
Publisher Information:
Elsevier BV, 2017.
Publication Year:
2017
Document Type:
Buch Part of book or chapter of book<br />Other literature type
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1016/b978-0-12-804524-4.00003-8
Rights:
Elsevier TDM
Accession Number:
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb471491fdda77677acfc8de4cc07478
Database:
OpenAIRE

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This study applied the Monte Carlo method to generate probabilistic distributions for describing the CO2 footprint of the superstructure of a high-rise concrete office building. The distribution profile was constructed with the material-use data collected from 13 high-rise concrete office buildings in Hong Kong. Results indicated that the average carbon footprint of the superstructure of an office building was 215.1 kg CO2/m22. External walls and upper-floor construction had the highest CO2 footprint, followed by suspended ceilings and finishes. These three elements altogether accounted for an average of 84.2% of the CO2 footprint associated with the superstructure. Also, this study evaluated the emissions-reduction impacts of five different material-use options over a 60-year lifespan. Among all the studied options, the most effective option was to maintain 15–30% of the existing structural and nonstructural building elements as this could reduce the CO2 footprint by 17.3%. Diverting construction wastes to recycling could reduce the CO2 footprint by 5.9%. Reusing resources and importing regional materials could only reduce the CO2 footprint by 3.2% and 3.1%, respectively. In contrast, the CO2 footprint would be increased by 5% if offsite fabricated materials were used in facades, slabs, and partition walls.