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Computational design exploration of a segmented concrete shell building floor system

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Oval, R 
Shepherd, P 
Orr, J 

Abstract

jats:p The construction industry is responsible for nearly half of the UK's carbon dioxide emissions and the use of an extremely large volume of concrete – the world's most widely used man-made material – accounts for more than 7% of global carbon dioxide emissions. The scale of this problem spawned research to explore the potential for structurally efficient non-prismatic geometries to reduce the amount of concrete used in building elements substantially, thus also reducing their embodied carbon dioxide footprint. In particular, the research focused on segmented thin concrete shells as floor slabs, leveraging computational design and digital fabrication methodologies to automate their production off site. An important part of this research was the development of a computational framework for the design of thin concrete shells in order to make such a construction methodology accessible to building designers in practice. The framework combines solutions for parametric modelling, finite-element analysis, isogeometric analysis, form-finding and optimisation, along with embedded fabrication constraints specific to the project's automated manufacturing system. The application of the developed computational framework in the design of a 4.5 m × 4.5 m prototype is documented in this paper, illustrating how automating concrete construction can transform the industry towards net-zero. </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

4005 Civil Engineering, 40 Engineering, 12 Responsible Consumption and Production

Journal Title

Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers: Structures and Buildings

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0965-0911
1751-7702

Volume Title

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/S031316/1)