Innovating Bhutan's residential construction with mass timber for economic and environmental sustainability
The global construction industry lacks innovation and contributes substantially to world energy consumption and greenhouse gas (GHGs) emissions. This study posits emerging mass timber construction (MTC) as an innovative alternative to Bhutan's archetype mid-rise residential structure, focusing...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Building Engineering 2023-11, Vol.78, p.107763, Article 107763 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The global construction industry lacks innovation and contributes substantially to world energy consumption and greenhouse gas (GHGs) emissions. This study posits emerging mass timber construction (MTC) as an innovative alternative to Bhutan's archetype mid-rise residential structure, focusing on voluminous assemblages of wall and structural systems. Using an analytical approach, we compared the existing concrete building's essential economic and environmental sustainability with its hypothetical MTC equivalent. The economics focused on the life-cycle cost analysis (LCCA), while the environment focused on the embodied energy and CO2 emissions, estimated using the process-based method in a cradle-to-gate boundary limit. The environmental assessment unsurprisingly showed superior performances for the mass timber buildings relative to the conventional concrete ones. In contrast, the LCCA showed that mass timber buildings had material and built-up costs greater than concrete buildings by 30 and 38%, respectively, which is driven primarily by the high cost of timber in Bhutan. However, the scenario analyses regarding the end-of-life benefits and timber price reduction possibilities presented irrefutable evidence that the construction costs of MTC are cheaper or competitive with the concrete option. Integrating economics and environmental assessment establishes mass timber building as a viable innovative alternative, providing essential information to building developers and policymakers.
•Innovate Bhutan's residential construction with mass timber, NLT and Glulam.•Focus on significant building assemblages: Wall and structural system.•Mass timber alternative demonstrated substantial environmental benefits.•LCCA scenario analysis showed potential for MTC cost reduction. |
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ISSN: | 2352-7102 2352-7102 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jobe.2023.107763 |