Advancing a Circular Economy in Construction
The construction industry’s contribution to waste generation highlights an urgent necessity for adopting circular models—sustainable practices that focus on minimizing waste and enhancing material reuse within the built environment. In 2018, the United States produced approximately 600 million tons of construction and demolition debris, while the European Union reported about 820 million tons, and China surpassed 2 billion tons annually.
From Linear to Circular: A Needed Transition
The massive quantities of resources wasted illustrate our current reliance on a linear economy characterized by a “take-make-dispose” mentality. Alternatively, employing a ”make-use-reuse” framework presents an invaluable chance to mitigate adverse environmental effects.
A collaborative initiative by researchers at MIT seeks to explore necessary steps for fostering widespread adoption of circular principles within the building sector. Their recent open-access study published in npj Urban Sustainability examines current stakeholder attitudes toward circularity along with their willingness to invest.
“This paper represents an initial exploration into understanding what drives industry stakeholders’ motivations and how these insights can facilitate greater adoption of sustainable practices,” states lead author Juliana Berglund-Brown, who is pursuing her Ph.D. in Architecture at MIT.
Understanding Stakeholder Perspectives
The research surveyed three key stakeholder categories across North America, Europe, and Asia: material suppliers; design and construction teams; and real estate developers. The team included Akrisht Pandey ’23; Fabio Duarte from the MIT Senseable City Lab; Raquel Ganitsky from Sustainable Real Estate Development Action Program; Randolph Kirchain from MIT’s Concrete Sustainability Hub; alongside Siqi Zheng as STL Champion Professor focused on Urban Studies and Planning.
While there is increasing awareness about recycling materials among industry players, large-scale implementation remains elusive due to various factors influencing construction requirements alongside governmental regulations as well as property developers’ financial interests.
The study reveals that challenges associated with embracing circular practices vary among roles within the industry. For design teams, primary concerns include insufficient client interest coupled with inconsistent assessment standards for structures. Material suppliers indicate logistical complexities accompanied by supply uncertainties as deterrents whereas real estate developers are primarily affected by increased costs related to structural evaluations.
Encouragingly though, participants indicated they would be willing to accept higher expenses—with developers expressing readiness for average increases up to 9.6% in project costs if it leads to at least a 52.9% reduction in embodied carbon emissions—a clear signal that incentive programs such as tax breaks would be effective motivators across all groups surveyed.
Paving the Way Towards Circularity
The findings emphasize bolstering dialogue between design professionals and real estate developers while delving deeper into practical solutions for existing roadblocks. “Circularity holds significant potential not just for value creation but also profitability,” asserts Berglund-Brown. “If stakeholders are driven by cost considerations, we should leverage incentives or establish strategies centered around them.”
Motivating factors prompting stakeholders towards embracing circular methods revealed distinct trends according to role within industries involved—future net-zero objectives resonate strongly with both property owners as well as designers/contractors while regulatory guidance emerged prominently across respondent categories.”
“The construction sector requires compelling market drivers if it hopes embrace sustainable circular methods,” says Berglund-Brown adding “incentives or enforceable measures need introducing.”
The Impact of Policy Measures
This discussion surrounding policy’s role cannot fade unnoticed—significant advancements have been attained around designing buildings with reduced operational carbon post-implementation of emission restrictions like New York City’s Local Law 97 & Boston’s Building Emissions Reduction Ordinance representing effective frameworks potentially replicable elsewhere toward reducing embodied carbon.”
Berglund-Brown proposes municipalities could consider regulations mandating deconstruction processes instead demolition typically generating waste allowing salvaged components repurposed conservatively – pivotal top-down orders could initiate shifts throughout supply chains directing recycled building products now deemed obsolete.
More obstacles preventing large-scale shift towards sustainability were highlighted including perceived risks involving reuse methodologies will surely disrupt standard professional design protocols making reassessment imperative.”It’s crucial we understand ideal pathways steering this transition despite uncertainties dictated through our results,” commented Berglund-Brown highlighting researcher involvement required further refining best practice standards aiding risk minimization.
Pioneering Ideas Shaking Up Conventional Practices
Swaying longstanding norms isn’t alien terrain designers working under auspice scholars — one noteworthy innovation hailing from MIT revolves around modular product lines dubbed Pixelframe copyrights convey this concept conducive install specialized kits facilitating concrete elements disassembly/reassembly catering flexibility diverse applications housing warehousing durability ensuring material efficiency sustained precisely desired outcomes!”