LCA of Concrete and Steel Building Frames
Journal article, 1998

The effects on the external environment of seven concrete and steel building frames representative of present-day building technology in Sweden were analysed using LCA methodology. Objects of the study included frame construction and supplementary materials. Several-storey offices and dwellings were studied. The functional unit was defined as one average m2 of floor area during the lifetime of the building. Inventory data were elaborated for concrete and steel production, the building site, service life, demolition and final disposal. Parameters included were raw material use, energy use, emissions to air, emissions to water and waste generation. The inventory results were presented and evaluated as such, in addition to an interpretation by using three quantitative impact assessment methods. Parameters that weighed heavily were use of fossil fuels, CO2, electricity, SOx 2 NOx 2 alloy materials and waste, depending on what assessment method was used. Over the life cycle, building production from cradle to gate accounted for about the same contribution to total environmental loads as maintenance and replacement of heat losses through external walls during service life, whereas demolition and final disposal accounted for a considerably lower contribution.

concrete

buildings

steel

LCA

Author

Åsa Jönsson

Department of Sanitary Engineering

Anne-Marie Tillman

Chalmers, COMESA, Environmental Systems Analysis

Thomas Björklund

Chalmers, COMESA, Environmental Systems Analysis

The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment

Vol. 3 4 216-224

Subject Categories

Construction Management

Other Environmental Engineering

DOI

10.1007/BF02977572

More information

Created

10/7/2017