A Theoretical Framework for Circular Economy Research in the Built Environment
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Publication Date
2016-04-20Journal Title
Building Information Modelling, Building Performance, Design and Smart Construction
ISBN
978-3-319-50345-5
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Pages
31-44
Type
Book chapter
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Pomponi, F., & Moncaster, A. (2016). A Theoretical Framework for Circular Economy Research in the Built Environment. Springer International Publishing, Building Information Modelling, Building Performance, Design and Smart Construction. [Book chapter]. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-50346-2_3
Abstract
Circular economy is quickly gaining momentum across numerous research fields. The founding principles of circular economies lie in a different perspective on, and management of, resources under the idea that an ever-growing economic development and profitability can happen without an ever-growing pressure on the environment. As such, the built environment has a lot to contribute, being the sector with the greatest environmental impacts. However, the few existing cases of current research in the built environment from a circular economy perspective seem to have just replaced the 3R principle (reduce, reuse, recycle) with the new ‘buzz-word’. In this paper, we argue that a significantly different research approach is necessary if the circular economy is to keep up to its promise of being a new paradigm for sustainability. We therefore propose a framework to formulate building research from within a circular economy perspective. The framework is built around six pillars and acknowledges the key role of interdisciplinary research and that of both bottom-up and top-down initiatives to facilitate the transition to ‘circular’ buildings. Although theoretical in nature, the framework has been tested against current discourse about buildings and circular economies and it has proven a valuable tool to cluster existing initiatives and highlight missing interdisciplinary links. As such it can provide a valuable starting point to contribute to the theoretical foundations of building research from within the new paradigm of circular economies and also shape future research directions.
Sponsorship
Isaac Newton Trust (1321(c))
Embargo Lift Date
2100-01-01
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-50346-2_3
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.7353
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