Life cycle sustainability assessment for multi-criteria decision making in bridge design: A review
Review article, 2020

Sustainable design of infrastructures has become a major matter of study since the recent establishment of the Agenda 2030. This paper provides a systematic literature review on the use of multi-criteria decision making techniques used so far for the sustainable design of bridges. Special attention is put as well on how the reviewed studies assess the sustainable performance of bridge designs along their life cycle from the economic, the environmental and the social perspective. Although SAW and AHP are recurrently used in the sustainable assessment of bridges, the analysis of the most recent articles show that the application of TOPSIS and PROMETHEE techniques are gaining increasing relevance for such purpose. Most of the studies focus on the research of the construction and the maintenance stage of bridges. However, a need for further analysis is identified when it comes to the assessment of the impacts resulting from the End of Life cycle stage of bridges from a sustainable point of view. The use of intuitionistic and neutrosophic logic have been detected as emerging alternatives to the fuzzy approach of decision making problems.

sustainability

MCDM

state of the art

bridge design

life cycle assessment

decision making

Author

Ignacio Javier Navarro

Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV)

Vicent Penadés-Plà

Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV)

David Martínez-Muñoz

Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV)

Rasmus Rempling

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering

Víctor Yepes

Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV)

Journal of Civil Engineering and Management

1392-3730 (ISSN) 18223605 (eISSN)

Vol. 26 7 690-704

Sustainable design and production planning

VINNOVA (2017-03312), 2017-11-01 -- 2020-02-29.

Swedish Transport Administration, 2017-11-01 -- 2020-05-29.

NCC AB, 2017-11-01 -- 2020-05-29.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Subject Categories

Energy Engineering

Construction Management

Building Technologies

DOI

10.3846/jcem.2020.13599

More information

Latest update

11/20/2020