Life Cycle Assessment of a Three-Storey Terrace of Three Timber-Framed Residential Workplace Units

Author:

Clancy Michael A.1,Starbuck Sally2,O’Dwyer Jean3ORCID,Byrne Kenneth A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, School of Natural Sciences, University of Limerick, V94 T9PX Limerick, Ireland

2. Gaïa Ecotecture, The Ecovillage, Cloughjordan, E53 VP86 County Tipperary, Ireland

3. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University College Cork, T23 N73K Cork, Ireland

Abstract

There is an urgent need to evaluate the environmental impacts of both traditional and more recent innovations in sustainable building materials. This study conducted a life cycle assessment (LCA) of a single three-storey (aboveground) terrace in Ireland composed of three timber-framed residential workplace units. The supply of raw materials, their transport to the manufacturing site, and the manufacturing processes for the materials used in the building account for 58% of the GWP during the production stage. The horizontal elements of the An Corrán building and roof account for the largest contribution (29.3%) to the GWP environmental impact. The LCA results show that the building’s 469 m2 gross internal floor area (GIFA) produced life cycle carbon emissions of 220 t CO2e and has an embodied carbon value of 398 kg CO2e m−2 and 6.63 kg CO2e m−2 a−1 for the building’s 60-year estimated cradle-to-grave life cycle. When compared to conventional (i.e., masonry) and timber-framed buildings in Europe, the An Corrán building shows that substantial GWP savings occurred during the Use Stage with a GWP footprint of 50.5 kg CO2e m2 compared to 375.65 and 386.6 kg CO2e m2 for previously reported masonry and timber-framed houses, respectively.

Funder

European Union’s FP7 ERA-NET Sumforest grant programme

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Forestry

Reference44 articles.

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2. (2022, April 25). Council for Forest Research and Development COFORD-About Us. Available online: http://www.coford.ie/.

3. World Green Building Council (2019). Bringing Embodied Carbon Upfront: Coordinated Action for the Building and Construction Sector to Tackle Embodied Carbon, World Green Building Council.

4. (2022, November 02). European Forest Institute (EFI) BenchValue–Benchmarking Wood Material Value Chains against Non-Renewable Value Chains by Using and Expanding Assessment Tool “ToSIA”. Available online: https://efi.int/projects/benchvalue-benchmarking-wood-material-value-chains-against-non-renewable-value-chains.

5. Harte, A.M., McPolin, D., Sikora, K., O’Neill, C., and O’Ceallaigh, C. (2014, January 28–29). Irish Timber–Characterisation, Potential and Innovation. Proceedings of the Civil Engineering Research in Ireland Conference (CERAI), QUB, Belfast, UK.

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