Background
“Always act so as to increase the number of choices.” (Heinz von Förster)1: Always build so as to create more choices – while being open to multiple usages, tolerant as to multiple applications and creating a repair-friendly environment, …
BauZ! 2019: Having a conversation about the sustainable further construction and refurbishment of existing building stock. BauZ! is the industry meeting point where investors, planners, trade planners, manufacturers and executing companies link up:
Plenary presentations, embedded in panel talks involving further speakers and exhibitors; the Congress at the Round Tables with more in-depth presentations within a smaller circle of participants; talks in the foyer during the breaks, receptions and a site visit to Vienna-based refurbishment projects.
Four aspects
1 Bringing usage into being!
The investor, property-developer, builder-owner and joint-building-venture perspective (participation of subsequent users as builder-owners). The building as an economic object.
For example: (show pioneering projects!)
- Affordability as a topical concept in the discourse: cheap building versus land costs
- Cost explosion (land prices, economic cycle)
- Trend towards smaller apartments
- Social housing
- Quality: cost-benefit analyses for Nearly-Zero-Energy Buildings (NZEB)
- Typology: new townhouses, flexible, ground-floor zones
Commercial utilization:
- Apartment ownership or rental models
- Mix of living/working, co-housing, co-working
- Repurposing – offices to apartments
- Tenancy law
Impact:
- Refurbishment as engine of neighborhood development; redensification. (Location as overarching criterion – yet each refurbished building, each refurbished road space and free space, and each means of public transport contributes to providing clear recognition also of the surrounding neighborhood.)
- Micro-quarters – Refurbishment and densification
- Regulation: urban-development contracts; Austrian Climate Protection Plan #mission2030 – The Climate and Energy Strategy of the Austrian Federal Government
2 Functionality and beauty! – Planning the building
The designers’ perspective: architecture, urban planning, planning of green spaces and free spaces. The building as a functional and esthetic object.
For example: (show pioneering projects!)
- Location identity
- Urban redensification
- Refurbishing for 2050 (EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive 2010/31/EU); OIB (Austrian Institute for Construction Engineering) document on the definition of the nearly-zero-energy building and for the determination of interim goals in a “National Plan” according to Art. 9 (3) pertaining to 2010/31/EU.
- 2000-W refurbishment, neighborhood development
- Where is New Housing headed? (flexibility, resilience, disassembly capacity, social matters)
- Flexible floor plans – Usage neutrality
- Facade systems for refurbishment with integrated building engineering
- Constructions that can be dismantled
- Greenery – at the building, on the building, within free spaces
- User needs: Untrammeled corners! Preventing excessive refurbishment! No one minds a little greenery! Kids!
- Integrated planning: facility managers are on board already in the planning stage and voice their concerns.
- Digitized planning (BIM) regarding existing building stock (“Digital twin” versus “Digital life partner”: someone I have to come to terms with, and not someone resembling me). Quality of communications among stakeholders along the production chain.
- Building codes, building-code amendments; protection of monuments; standards
3 The building is calculated in structural-stability and building-physics terms, simulated, and, later on, surveyed in the course of building monitoring.
The perspective of building-physics and building-engineering trade planners. The building as a physical object.
For example: (show pioneering projects!)
- Comfort (suitability for use in the summer, noise abatement, air humidity, indoor air quality)
- Energy efficiency of building envelope, energy recovery at the building
- Building engineering: making use of simplified schemes. Refurbishments as a life-cycle factor.
- Solar protection – complex area of daylight supply, service life/costs
- Interior insulation
- Building monitoring, regulation during building operation, smart-home retrofit
- Ecological building assessment (catalogues of criteria for refurbishments)
4 The building is being realized – and dismantled later on
The perspective of materials. Aspects contributed by construction-product and components manufacturers, executing companies and building operators: The building as a material object.
For example: (show pioneering projects!)
Manufacturers:
- Innovative construction products used for refurbishment
- Ecologically-sound construction products used for refurbishment
- Ecological sustainability and disposal; circular economy
- Raw materials in urban areas / urban mining: waste as secondary raw material: urban structures as potential suppliers of raw materials. Recycling and recovery techniques, raw-material deposits, resource registries for locating potential raw materials as well as innovative product and building design.
- 2015 EU Action Plan for the Circular Economy devised by the European Commission
Executing companies:
- Cooperation in the – digitized – construction process
Building operation:
- Cleaning, maintenance, upkeep of green spaces
- Damages, ease-of-repair, service lives, low maintenance … (“How much do we actually have to pay?”); e.g. algae infestation on the exterior rendering, chemical cleaning, soil and water-body protection; e.g. leakages in activated building components; e.g. smart home, deliverability of spare parts after several years, with technology progressing rapidly.
1Heinz v. Förster’s “Ethical Imperative” taken from: Die ZEIT 1998/04, interview conducted by Bernhard Pörksen with H.v. F.