What is sustainable architecture and why is it important for smart cities?
This article is also available here in Spanish.

What is sustainable architecture and why is it important for smart cities?

My list

Author | M. Martínez Euklidiadas

Sustainable architecture is a form of architecture that seeks to minimize the impact of buildings, protect the environment, optimize resources and even ensure the wellbeing of people or the economy after the construction work. Given the pressure currently being put on Earth by humans, sustainable architecture is now unavoidable and the only feasible future.

Fundamental principles of sustainable architecture

The sustainable architecture concept came about in 1987 with the report by the minister Gro Harlem Brundtland entitled Our Common Future (also called the Brundtland Report), in which a generic definition of sustainability was used beyond the environmental definitions, which undoubtedly form the hard core of the fundamental principles of sustainable architecture:

● The impact during construction, operation and demolition must be as minimal as possible.

Locally sourced materials, with low energy and embodied carbon dioxide must be used.

○ Passive heating and cooling systems should be prioritized, as well as hyperlocal sources of energy.

○ The materials used in the construction must be able to be reused at the end of their useful life.

● The building must be designed and looked after in order to be as durable as technically feasible. Continuous demolition and construction must be avoided.

● In as far as possible, underutilized spaces should be avoided, by means of multi-use rooms.

Furthermore, architecture is not alone, but rather it falls with urban planning, the impact of which must also be reduced through its own principles.

Benefits and advantages of sustainable architecture

Obviously, a significant environmental impact reduction is an advantage to be taken into account. However, there are also some co-benefits such as improving the health and wellbeing of both occupants and nearby residents.

When a building removes gas lines to heat it with heat pumps, local chemical pollution is reduced. And if passive thermal control systems are used, local thermal pollution is avoided too.

High-use (multi-use) buildings are often the point of origin of the social and associative fabric of the neighborhood, and the nexus of new social movements.

We should also remember than a more efficient use of resources also tends to be cheaper in the long term.

What are the current trends in sustainable architecture?

sustainable architecture 2

The popularity of sustainable architecture is constantly on the rise, as people become more aware of how necessary it is. Some of its trends include:

● Combining a concrete base with a timber structure for upper floors in mixed construction buildings.

● Prioritizing passive design is critical in terms of environmental and economic sustainability in the long term: if the building cools itself, all the better in a Net Zero setting.

● Traceability of local low impact incorporated materials and a return to light materials such as bamboo or fibers. This traceability enables the future circularity of materials.

● In the urban layout, designing connected buildings with collective public transport networks, since a significant part of the building depends on its isolation and the need to use a private vehicle.

The challenges of sustainable architecture

The greatest challenge of sustainable architecture is probably the apparent high price compared to unsustainable architecture, the low sum of which is not because it is more efficient, but rather because costs are outsourced. Eco-friendly materials have a higher price but a lower cost. The price of unsustainable materials must cover that cost.

Images | Vitalii Mazur, Pawel Czerwinski

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

MB
MARLENE BAUDET
EJ
Analyst
NC
Nicolas Capo
Alotark
architect@ALOTARK
DV
Daniel Vivas de cabl
UPC
Estudiante ingeniería
SP
Shazil Mehmood Planner
Urban Community Housing PVT LTD
GG
Giovanni Galanti
Rete WEEC (World Environmental Education Congress) Italia
President of the Tuscany's Regional Section
Neşe Özçandır
Antalya Metropolitan Municipalty
H2020- MAtchUP Project Technical Assistance
MS
Mark Swartz
PIF
Senior Advisor
AS
Atsushi Shimizu
Re:public
DS
David Sheehan
The DWS Group
Managing Director / The DWS Group
RD
Rakshit Dayal
Exhibitions India Group
Sales manager
TP
Tomas Pellisé Urquiza
Barcelona Container Depot Service, S.L.
General Manager
JS
Jonny Sutejo
Buana Property
Owner
ML
Mateusz Lendzinski
Ministry of Urban Development and Housing Hamburg
Product Owner
AB
Atul Badadhe
Sai Rachana Devloper
As a Civil Engineer
VA
Víctor Alarcón
INECO
Project Professional
LC
Larah Casadio
Student
Student, 4th year.
DL
Dinky Lin
China Mobile International (UK) Ltd
Sales Manager
OK
Olga Korshunov
Minute.ly
BA degree in Sustainability and Government. Seeking a new opportunity.
SN
Siddharth Nambiar
CitiSens
NC
Naiara Chaler
Aticco

Are we building the cities we really need?

Explore Cartography of Our Urban Future —a bold rethink of ‘smart’ cities and what we must change by 2030.