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posted by martyb on Friday November 03 2017, @05:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the tinker-toy-technology dept.

Have building-size legos finally arrived?

The Institute for Civil Engineering and Environment (INCEEN) at the University of Luxembourg have signed a "memorandum of understanding" with the Suisse Federal Laboratories of Materials Science and Technology (Empa) of the domain of ETH Zürich to collaborate on research on energy efficiency in the construction sector.

As the building sector is generating a large amount of CO2 emissions, resource consumption and waste production, new eco-construction approaches are needed. Therefore, the first collaboration project entitled "Eco-Construction for Sustainable Development" (ECON4SD) will focus on the development of novel components and design models for resource and energy efficient buildings based on the construction materials concrete, steel and timber.

ECON4SD will bring together researchers from different civil engineering fields and architecture at the University of Luxembourg and the Empa Zürich, as well as from universities abroad in cooperation with partners from industry and consultancies in Luxembourg. One vision of the project is to develop building components that can be re-used after a building has reached the end of its life cycle and is disassembled. "The ECON4SD aims to turn buildings into materials and components banks and will allow producers of structural elements to come to a different business model. That would consist in loaning materials or components to customers and take them back after use in a particular building, in order to resell them directly, recondition or recycle them," commented professor Danièle Waldmann of the University of Luxembourg. "Thereby, the project paves the way for a future CE material or component passport comparable to the already existing energy passport."


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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Friday November 03 2017, @07:01PM

    by frojack (1554) on Friday November 03 2017, @07:01PM (#591813) Journal

    Most other industries require cradle to grave tracking of their materials, and account for the proper disposal.

    Like what other industries?

    Seriously, that does not happen. It just doesn't.
    Cars? sold as scrap eventually, because its cheaper than mining new metals, Glass and plastic parts? - Mostly sent to the land fill. No tracking. No assurances of proper recycle.

    Factories torn down multi-story buildings? Steel recycled, most of the cement busted up hauled away, but NOT mixed into new buildings.

    Look, it just doesn't happen the way you imagine. The metals have value.
    Realistically those are the only parts of any obsolete structure that are reliably recycled. But only because its cheap and and easy to melt down.

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