Low carbon housing refurbishment challenges in Ireland : a discussion
Abstract
There are a great many variants which need to be considered prior to undertaking a building’s
refurbishment, including: cost of refurbishment and the pay-back time, effects to health and
the environment in respect to materials employed, annual fuel economy and cost of
maintenance; aesthetics and functionality, comfort levels associated with heating, cooling,
sound and air quality and then the longevity of the building fabric and improvements. (Brager,
1996)
A building in its environment forms part of a complex technological, ecological, social and
esthetical system in the built environment; where sub systems which stem from these
interdependencies influence the total efficiency performance. (Kaklauskas et al., 2005)
There is no single solution to studying the challenges of low carbon housing refurbishment in
Ireland; the discussion to these challenges is entrenched in broader aspects which have far
reaching influence; such as: energy inputs needed to produce a product, the environmental
impact associated with product choice, the informed management of material choices, the
balance between economic development and the environment such as poverty and other social
economic aspects, the question of land and resource management including the legalistic
rights to these decisions, the optimisation and use of smart technologies both in the wider
distribution sense as well as in local deployment of renewable energy integration; it became
apparent that a holistic approach was needed to establish a solid discussion on this topic and
therefore included but is not exclusive to the opening chapters on Embodied Carbon in
Construction and Sustainability.
14
This research therefore explores the rationale to refurbishment prior to the challenges and
exposes the necessary underlying influences, barriers and enablers, such as life cycle
assessment, the impact of building materials, tools to calculate and manage informed choices,
sustainable development models including the question of biomass in a modem society, low
carbon opportunities and the natural impetus of community involvement in a sustainable and
harmonised network, and then the outlook and arguments for refurbishment as part of
Ireland’s response to meeting the Kyoto Agreement and the 2020 GHG emission levels
through decision making models and other tools which currently present.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: