Urban mining in design and construction processes

A study on implementing urban mining of existing building elements in the local housing for improving the construction industry towards a circular economy

Master Thesis (2019)
Author(s)

N. Franssen (TU Delft - Architecture and the Built Environment)

Contributor(s)

Louis Lousberg – Mentor (Design & Construction Management)

Alexander Koutamanis – Graduation committee member (Design & Construction Management)

R. Binnekamp – Coach (TU Delft - Real Estate Management)

Jim Teunizen – Coach

Jip van Grinsven – Coach

Faculty
Architecture and the Built Environment
Copyright
© 2019 Niels Franssen
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 Niels Franssen
Graduation Date
08-11-2019
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
['Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences | Management in the Built Environment']
Faculty
Architecture and the Built Environment
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

In most of the current starting construction projects, most stakeholders use virgin materials for building elements. Considering climate change, building materials are getting scarce, it is necessary to reduce the number of virgin building materials and improve circularity in the construction industry. The problem is the absence of a middle man that could research the data of existing usable materials and connect this information to stakeholders of starting dwelling projects. This raises the research question: How can an operational model link the supply of existing building materials with the demand for new construction projects in order to reduce the use of virgin materials and thereby improve circularity in the construction industry? The goal of this research is to provide a useful tool for the construction industry to join the transition towards a circular economy. Based on three levels of scale, an operational model is developed that gives a comparison between the materials costs of existing building elements and virgin building elements for a starting dwelling project. This comparison results in insight and an overview for clients, such as municipalities or housing corporations into the costs of potential dwellings built with existing building materials. The operational tool also gives insight in whether or not reusable building materials provide a feasible business case, considering a framework based on the clients input.

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