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Environmental Impact of Demolishing a Steel Structure Design for Disassembly

Elżbieta Broniewicz, Karolina Dec

2022Energies19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The encouraging Design for Disassembly appears in the literature more and more often. Such a design appears to offer clear environmental advantages. However, there are still not enough research results to support the existence of these benefits. The authors using the Life Cycle Assessment method, which assesses the energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions during the demolition and operation of steel structure. Steel is completely recyclable and, in terms of tonnage, is the most recycled material worldwide. We assessed three scenarios: (1) complete re-remelting (recycling) of the structure; (2) partial reuse of construction elements + remelting (recovery + recycling); and (3) complete reuse of the structure (recovery). GaBi software was used for the analysis. It was found that the environmental impact varied significantly among the examined scenarios. The first scenario poses the greatest environmental burden. However, compared to Scenario no. 1, Scenario 3’s environmental impact is more than 70% lower.

Topics & Concepts

DemolitionReuseTonnageLife-cycle assessmentEnvironmental impact assessmentGreenhouse gasEnergy consumptionEngineeringEnvironmental scienceWaste managementEnvironmental economicsCivil engineeringProduction (economics)Electrical engineeringGeologyBiologyEcologyEconomicsMacroeconomicsOceanographyRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesRecycled Aggregate Concrete PerformanceEnvironmental Impact and Sustainability