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Expandable Houses: An Explorative Life Cycle Cost Analysis

Charlotte Cambier, Waldo Galle, Niels De Temmerman

2021Sustainability19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In addition to the environmental burden of its construction and demolition activities, the Flemish housing market faces a structural affordability challenge. As one possible answer, this research explores the potential of so-called expandable houses, being built increasingly often. Through specific design choices that enable the disassembly and future reuse of individual components and so align with the idea of a circular economy, expandable houses promise to provide ever-changing homes with a smaller impact on the environment and at a lower cost for clients. In this paper, an expandable house suitable for various housing needs is conceived through a scenario-based research-by-design approach and compared to a reference house for Flanders. Subsequently, for both houses the life cycle costs are calculated and compared. The results of this exploration support the proposition that designing expandable houses can be a catalyst for sustainable, circular housing development and that households could benefit from its social, economic and ecological qualities. It requires, however, a dynamic perspective on evaluating their life-cycle impact.

Topics & Concepts

Circular economyDemolitionReuseSustainabilityFlemishBusinessLife-cycle assessmentArchitectural engineeringEnvironmental economicsEngineeringEconomicsCivil engineeringProduction (economics)EcologyMacroeconomicsWaste managementBiologyArchaeologyHistorySustainable Building Design and AssessmentCollaborative and Sustainable Housing Initiatives
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