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http://dx.doi.org/10.21022/IJHRB.2017.6.4.333

The Path to Life Cycle Carbon Neutrality in High Rise Buildings  

Drew, Chris (Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture)
Quintanilla, Natalia (Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture)
Publication Information
International Journal of High-Rise Buildings / v.6, no.4, 2017 , pp. 333-343 More about this Journal
Abstract
Across the world, building energy codes are becoming stricter, demanding higher levels of energy performance with each issuance. Some locations have taken initiatives to eliminate operational emissions altogether by requiring buildings to be carbon neutral. However, while the objectives of carbon neutrality are without doubt statement worthy, we believe that once operational performance has been tackled to a reasonable level of performance the sights should be trained on a different objective-life; cycle carbon. This paper defines what we mean by life cycle carbon neutrality and presents an approach toward reducing it.
Keywords
Life cycle; Embodied carbon; Operation carbon;
Citations & Related Records
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  • Reference
1 American Society of Heating Refrigerating and Airconditioning Engineers (1989). Standard 90.1-1989, Energy Efficient Design of New Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings, ASHRAE.
2 Architecture 2030 (2017), "Zero Net Carbon (ZNC) Building", Accessed from http://www.architecture2030.org/ downloads/znc_building_definition.pdf 2017.11.09.
3 New Buildings Institute (2016). 2016 List of Zero net Energy Buildings. New Buildings Institute, Portland, USA.
4 USGBC (2017) LEED BD+C: New Construction V4 - LEED v4 Alternative Energy Performance Metric, Accessed from https://www.usgbc.org/credits/eapc95v4 2017.11.09