Before You Build: Early Strategies for Carbon Reduction
Key Strategies:
- Site selection; consider adaptive reuse
- Material reduction strategies and low-carbon choices
- Evaluate structural systems and prefabrication solutions
- Quantify embodied carbon and perform life-cycle assessments
Build Less
The most sustainable building is the one that is already built.
Increased awareness of climate change impacts is a key driver for investors, developers, and tenants to begin adopting this repurposing approach and breathe new life into our downtowns.
Repurposing old buildings—particularly those that are vacant—reduces the need for construction of new buildings and the consumption of land, energy, materials, and financial resources that they require.
Additionally, the ability to transform currently underutilized buildings for a new purpose can bring new revenue streams for customers. We have seen this in industrial to retail, office to multi-family, office to hotel and office to laboratory/research spaces catering to the rise in the life science sector.
How landlords, developers, and banks tackle the repurposement of aged buildings will be a “hot topic” for the next decade.
Consider Adaptive Reuse
According to the U.S. Department of Energy, half of all commercial buildings in the U.S. were constructed before 1980. That means there is a surplus of aging buildings with potential for reuse. We are seeing an increase in interest in adaptive reuse as a cost saving strategy, but also a way to meet carbon reduction goals.
For DPR, we have employed an adaptive use strategy on many of our own office spaces. With our “living lab” offices, we can push the limits to explore what is possible in green and healthy workplace design. In fact, when looking at our own offices, the cost comparisons between new construction and repurposement prove out. Based on our experience, existing building stock can be renovated to high levels of performance for roughly the same cost as a baseline building and approximately 40% less than building new.
20 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, NW, WASHINGTON, DC
Overview of the lessons learned on the 20 Mass Avenue repositioning project, showcasing the key factors that make adaptive reuse successful.
REVITALIZING URBAN AREAS THROUGH ADAPTIVE REUSE
By adapting older buildings for reuse, customers can alleviate the high costs associated with new construction and the purchase of new land, which are typically more in urban areas.
Site Selection
DPR works closely with customers and design teams to evaluate the viability of potential properties and buildings for the intended purpose. And we can help customers look at new building uses so customers can take advantage of market trends while also being more sustainable.
SITE CONSIDERATIONS FOR DATA CENTERS
How do we support the growth of digital infrastructure while also better managing its energy, water and carbon footprint? DPR convened a panel of industry experts to take a deep dive into what’s possible and how we can collaborate for a future of greener data centers.
Build Light
A building's structure is now more important than ever when it comes to sustainability. Not only do lighter structures have lower first costs, but they use less concrete and steel, which are two of the largest contributors to global carbon emissions in the construction industry (over 20%).
With the global building floor area expected to double by 2060, customers need to start looking at both lighter and more sustainable structures. Materials like timber have been increasing in popularity due to the sustainability benefits, but also the ability to prefabricate which also facilitates rapid construction, reduces the labor shortage impacts, reduces cost, and results in higher quality products.
Quantify Embodied Carbon
A building’s structural system typically represents over half of the embodied carbon of construction. DPR calculates the embodied carbon for projects as early as pursuit stage on behalf of our customers to get an understanding of the overall carbon impact of different materials. We use tools like OneClick LCA, EC3, EPIC and ZeroGuide depending on the stage and level of detail required.
The example below shows of breakdown of Global Warming Potential (GWP) of a project in California where DPR used LCA to identify the focus areas that most impact embodied carbon reduction strategies.
In April 2021, GPLA joined the DPR family of companies, allowing DPR to take a more cross-functional, collaborative, and holistic approach to project delivery. With their vast experience, combined with DPR's building expertise, we can provide detailed analysis to help customers pick the right solution for their project, weighing all the variables that can impact the outcome.
Evaluate Structural Systems
DPR works with customers to evaluate different structural options for their facility so they can make better decisions. When evaluating various structural systems, we compare both tangible and intangible variables that will be affected by the system.
Detailed structural analysis can right size individual structural members rather than apply a generic safety factor that can lead to an unnecessary amount of building materials being used.
Determining a building's structural system is influenced by the first cost, design criteria, ease of operation, sustainability, tenant satisfaction, and life cycle impacts. DPR has the tools and data to help you make informed decisions.
PROJECT
Mass timber at Lincoln Property
Echo Street West, Atlanta, GA
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PROJECT
Mass timber at DPR's Regional Office
Sacramento, CA
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Implement Material Reduction Strategies
Working with the design and construction team to incorporate design features like exposed ceilings can reduce finish materials such as drywall, ACT and paint.
Build Wise
Making data driven decisions and incorporating new technologies and processes allows teams to build smarter and pass a more sustainable and higher quality product on to customers.
It is important to understand that sustainable building is not limited to embodied carbon. Teams must also consider waste reduction, deconstructability, supply chain control, water/energy conservation, rework prevention, biophilia effect, improved environmental conditions for frontline works, and 3rd party certification goals when evaluating overall building sustainability.
Evaluate Prefab Solutions
Many sustainability benefits—even beyond embodied carbon— can be realized through a strategic construction prefabrication approach. While every customer is unique and every project is different, DPR works with customers to develop a specific prefab strategy to meet the organization's needs and goals, weigh the benefits of each solution, and improve the overall process.
Prefabrication can reduce material and labor waste and even scrap removal from job sites.
Less waste means fewer trips to the landfill and less labor for clean-up, improving site logistics.
Fewer people and vehicles on-site reduces a project’s carbon footprint.
As offsite manufactured components are unloaded, debris is loaded on the same truck for removal, reducing emissions.
Utilize Low Carbon Materials
Thoughtful selection and procurement of low carbon and innovative materials results in significant reductions to embodied carbon with relatively low or no cost premium.
DPR uses tools such as EC3 and OneClick LCA to find materials with localized Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) data. With our supplier and constructibility knowledge, we identify and procure low carbon materials such as low carbon concrete, steel, and insulation, and also pilot other innovative solutions such as recycled glass pozzolan.
Being a general contractor allows DPR to get direct feedback from our field experts, suppliers and trade partners on feasibility and cost of low carbon materials. Our self-performing capabilities combined with in-house structural engineering uniquely positions DPR to install low carbon solutions.
By replacing average industry materials with low carbon alternatives, we can demonstrate significant carbon reduction from the baseline.
CASE STUDY: Optimizing for Sustainability
For a commercial building in Northern California, we found we can reduce the embodied carbon up to 34% by using low embodied carbon material substitutions for each structural system option. We can reduce the embodied carbon by over 50% if we switch to a Mass timber structure.
Understand Current Market
Conditions
DPR actively tracks the main raw material indices and fabricated material index costs so we can identify and confirm pricing and spot anomalies in the supply chain. This knowledge facilitates better discussions with trade partners and assists in executing a thoughtful procurement strategy.
Build Collaboratively
Collaboration with all stakeholders is the backbone of a successful carbon reduction strategy. It starts long before the project is planned and continues through the entire life cycle.
By breaking down traditional silos in the construction industry, customers can achieve everything they set out to accomplish. Together, we work with teams to set carbon reduction goals and work together to achieve them.
Performing Building Life Cycle Assessments
Whole Building Life Cycle Analysis (WBLCA) is a process used to quantify the emissions and impacts associated with a building or project across its full life cycle. While historically architects and sustainability consultants performed this analysis on projects, it does not tell the whole story. General contractors, who control cost and procurement, can have a large impact on material and design strategies that can provide crucial input at early stages and help track carbon beyond the design phase and even into occupancy.
By working collaboratively as a team and performing LCA early in the design process, customers can benefit from the highest carbon reductions at the lowest costs. As the project progresses, the ability to reduce carbon decreases drastically.
DPR has an in-house team that performs early stage LCA and continues to track throughout the project life cycle. This allows the team to move beyond the purely calculative metrics and begin to get a true picture of the sustainability performance.
Model Before Building
On a typical construction project, rework can account for 12-15% of the cost of construction. Rework, which not only causes project delays and add cost, also results additional waste during construction. By utilizing virtual design and construction (VDC), modeling projects before they are built in the field, DPR is able to see conflicts prior to ordering and installing material, build it right the first time, and reduce unnecessary waste.
Modeling early and collaboratively with the entire team also allows for earlier decision making and less change down the road.
Integrated Approach
Every project can benefit from integration; integration creates synergies that have been proven to lead to higher performing buildings and happier building users, customers and project teams.
Integrating Project Delivery, a book authored by Martin Fischer, Howard Ashcraft, and DPR’s Dean Reed and Atul Khanzode, offers the first comprehensive look at the integrated project delivery (IPD) system. A Simple Framework has been developed to organize the essential steps for integration and combines the key structural, process, technology and behavior components necessary to drive the behavioral change required to achieve high-performance projects.
Getting Started
Covering all the bases to maximize carbon savings can be complicated, but having a partner with the right expertise can simplify the process and help get the intended results.
- Understand your organization's overall carbon reduction goals
- Include carbon budgets in the owners program requirements and basis of design
- Provide specifications requiring environmental project declaration or meeting certain embodied carbon thresholds
- Engage DPR's in-house team team to perform whole building life cycle analysis studies
- Discuss low carbon and design strategies early in the programming stages
Your Path to Carbon
Reduction
Implementing a Carbon Reduction Strategy throughout the project lifecycle — before you build, during your build, and after your build — to help you achieve your corporate sustainability goals.
Posted on September 3, 2024
Last Updated September 16, 2024