The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design

The path we are currently following towards ‘sustainable design’ is a result of the accidents of the past 300 years of history. If we look further back, to before the exploitation of fossil fuels, we find a very different approach to building envelopes, and to building use and comfort. This was nece...

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Main Authors: Robyn Pender, Daniel J. Lemieux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Atmosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/11/6/620
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author Robyn Pender
Daniel J. Lemieux
author_facet Robyn Pender
Daniel J. Lemieux
author_sort Robyn Pender
collection DOAJ
description The path we are currently following towards ‘sustainable design’ is a result of the accidents of the past 300 years of history. If we look further back, to before the exploitation of fossil fuels, we find a very different approach to building envelopes, and to building use and comfort. This was necessarily very low carbon, and demonstrably effective, but, unfortunately, we have forgotten many of the fundamental principles on which it rested. This paper argues that our current choice of retrofit pathway is leading us away from, rather than towards, a sustainable built environment. Current efforts to reduce carbon and energy based on modern ’layered’ envelopes and misunderstandings of thermal comfort are proving much less effective than predicted. We would further argue that they are too often delivering unintended consequences: contributing to the overuse of carbon and energy, and derailing the development of a sustainable built environment. We draw on research and case studies, as well as on the lessons from history, to show how the problem derives from a neglect of first-principles thinking and fundamental building physics. Equally, though, we show how combining good building physics with a re-evaluation of older approaches to construction and building use delivers some powerful and effective tools for tackling the climate emergency.
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spelling doaj.art-821c5bfb22b34a94aa3ef6bb0f2457b02023-11-20T03:31:32ZengMDPI AGAtmosphere2073-44332020-06-0111662010.3390/atmos11060620The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable DesignRobyn Pender0Daniel J. Lemieux1Historic England, 4th Floor Cannon Bridge House, 25 Dowgate Hill, London EC4R 2YA, UKWiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc., Northbrook, IL 60062, USAThe path we are currently following towards ‘sustainable design’ is a result of the accidents of the past 300 years of history. If we look further back, to before the exploitation of fossil fuels, we find a very different approach to building envelopes, and to building use and comfort. This was necessarily very low carbon, and demonstrably effective, but, unfortunately, we have forgotten many of the fundamental principles on which it rested. This paper argues that our current choice of retrofit pathway is leading us away from, rather than towards, a sustainable built environment. Current efforts to reduce carbon and energy based on modern ’layered’ envelopes and misunderstandings of thermal comfort are proving much less effective than predicted. We would further argue that they are too often delivering unintended consequences: contributing to the overuse of carbon and energy, and derailing the development of a sustainable built environment. We draw on research and case studies, as well as on the lessons from history, to show how the problem derives from a neglect of first-principles thinking and fundamental building physics. Equally, though, we show how combining good building physics with a re-evaluation of older approaches to construction and building use delivers some powerful and effective tools for tackling the climate emergency.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/11/6/620thermal comfortdurabilityperformancelife cycle analysishistoric buildings
spellingShingle Robyn Pender
Daniel J. Lemieux
The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
Atmosphere
thermal comfort
durability
performance
life cycle analysis
historic buildings
title The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
title_full The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
title_fullStr The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
title_full_unstemmed The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
title_short The Road Not Taken: Building Physics, and Returning to First Principles in Sustainable Design
title_sort road not taken building physics and returning to first principles in sustainable design
topic thermal comfort
durability
performance
life cycle analysis
historic buildings
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/11/6/620
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