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Designing out waste in high-rise residential buildings: analysis of precasting and methods and traditional construction

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conference contribution
posted on 2009-09-07, 13:42 authored by Andrew Baldwin, Chi-Sun Poon, Li-Yin Shen, Simon Austin, Irene Wong
The Construction industry is a major generator of waste material. Construction waste should be minimized at source. If we are to significantly reduce the level of construction waste designers should consider reducing construction waste during the design process. The majority of construction waste is generated from the concreting process. In general, any reduction in on-site concreting leads to waste reduction. Precasting and prefabrication therefore offers significant opportunities for the reduction of waste. If precasting is adopted there are significant implications for the design phase of the project. Additional information is needed by design staff, construction expertise is required as part of the design process. This paper shows how information modeling and Design Structure Matrix, (DSM), techniques enable designers to model and understand the implications of such decisions within the detailed design process.

History

School

  • Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering

Citation

BALDWIN, A.N. ... et al, 2006. Designing out waste in high-rise residential buildings: analysis of precasting and methods and traditional construction. Proceedings of International Conference on Asia-European Sustainable Urban Development, Chongqing, China, 4-6 April 2006

Publisher

University of Cambridge, Dept. of Architecture / © the authors

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2006

Notes

This is a conference paper.

ISBN

9780903248037

Language

  • en