Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Prepared by
Sarah Jenkin, URS New Zealand Limited and
Maibritt Pedersen Zari, Victoria University
Acknowledgements
Rethinking our built environments: Towards a sustainable future was subject to review by key
contributors in the fields of regenerative and restorative design. The authors wish to thank the
following contributors: Bill Reed, AIA, LEED, Regenesis Group, New Mexico, President of the
Integrative Design Collaborative; Nils Larsson, FRAIC, Executive Director of the International
Initiative for a Sustainable Built Environment (iiSBE); Craig Pocock, Director of Pocock Design:
Environment, and contract lecturer in landscape architecture, Lincoln University; and Alex
Couchman, Principal, Warren and Mahony Architects.
Contents
Executive Summary
Introduction
1
2
3
3
4
3.1
3.2
4.4
4.5
Literature review
Definitions
3.2.1 Comparing the concepts
Case Studies
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5
5
8
12
12
14
16
18
18
20
21
22
24
26
27
27
28
30
Regenerative development
The Willow School, Gladstone, New Jersey, USA
Restorative development
Living Water Garden, Chengdu, China
Cradle-to-cradle
The Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies, Cleveland, USA
Eco-efficiency
Conservation House, Wellington, New Zealand
30
30
31
31
33
33
35
35
37
Conclusions
38
iii
References
39
Appendices
Appendix A: Recognising Regenerative Development
Appendix B: Cradle-to-cradle Development
Appendix C: Eco-efficient Approach
42
43
44
Tables
Table 4.1:
15
Table 4.2:
17
Table 4.3:
25
Figures
Figure 3.1: Trajectory of environmentally responsible design
11
25
iv
Executive Summary
ES 1 Setting the scene
The negative environmental impacts of New Zealands built environment are immense.
Globally, 40 per cent of all energy and material resources are used to build and operate
buildings, 40 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions come from building construction and
operation, and 40 per cent of total waste results from construction and demolition activities
(UNEP, 2007). Added to this are additional impacts on land, water and air quality, as well as
human health.
Current sustainability practices as applied to the built environment, which aim to do less harm,
are insufficient to achieve a sustainable environment. This document presents cutting-edge
thinking about how New Zealands built environments can be developed to create a built
environment with environmental, social, cultural and economic benefits.
The definition of a sustainable built environment is changing rapidly. While aiming for neutral
or reduced environmental impacts in terms of energy, carbon, waste or water are worthwhile
targets, it is becoming clear that the built environment must go beyond this. It must have net
positive environmental benefits for the living world.
This implies that the built environment needs to produce more than it consumes, as well as
remedy pollution and damage. It is a departure from the idea that the best the built environment
can be is neutral in relation to the living world.
Concepts such as regenerative, restorative, cradle-to-cradle (eco-effectiveness) and eco-efficient
development are likely to contribute to achieving a sustainable built environment. According to
leading professionals in the field, the goal of such concepts is ecological and community
restoration or regeneration, where success is measured by improvements in health and wellbeing for humans, other living beings, and ecosystems as a whole (Reed, 2006; Kellert, 2004;
McDonough, 2002). This requires an expanded notion of what the built environment is and
how it should perform, as well as a better understanding of the relationships between it and
living environments.
Proponents of the concept of regenerative development suggest that the required shift to
regenerative development cannot be a gradual process of improvements rather, it will require
a fundamental rethinking of architectural and urban design.
The sustainable building work stream worked with industry to develop tools, guidelines and
guidance to assist central government organisations. The Ministry has also helped the New
Zealand Green Building Council to ensure Green Star rating tools were available to central
government organisations and New Zealand businesses more generally.
The review suggested taking a more holistic, integrated approach to long-term sustainable
building.
The Ministry for the Environment commissioned this research document Rethinking our built
environments: Towards a sustainable future as a way to identify the benefits of this approach
for central government organisations, and New Zealand as a whole.
identification of the environmental, social, cultural and economic benefits for each
approach
ES 4 Key findings
New Zealands existing built environment will largely still be in place in 50 years time. The
development of a sustainable built environment will therefore largely rely on retrofitting
existing infrastructure and buildings (Storey et al, 2004).
Business-as-usual in New Zealand has included conventional approaches to building design,
and green or high performance building design, termed here eco-efficiency.
Awareness has been growing, particularly over the last five years, of the importance of a
sustainable built environment. This is reflected in a number of ways, including the development
of the New Zealand Urban Design Protocol, the establishment of the New Zealand Green
Building Council, and built environment sustainability research consortiums, such as Beacon
Pathway.
vi
Each of the four main development approaches explored in this study has benefits, some of
them similar. It is expected benefits will intensify when moving along the sustainability
continuum from eco-efficiency (least sustainable) through to regenerative development (most
sustainable).
Eco-efficient development, while an improvement on conventional approaches, ultimately still
results in negative environmental impact (Reed, 2007). Given the scale of environmental issues
like climate change, and the short window for action some experts predict, this may not be an
adequate response to the problem beyond the short term.
Regenerative, restorative and cradle-to-cradle development aim for net positive
environmental outcomes. This is a new way of thinking that sees development as a way to
improve the health of ecosystems. The key differences between the three concepts lie in the
perceived role of humans. Restorative and cradle-to-cradle strategies seek to improve
ecosystem health through active human management, while regenerative strategies seek to
repair the capacity of ecosystems to function at optimum levels without ongoing human
intervention.
Some of the key potential benefits the three approaches could deliver are:
greater understanding of local traditions and indigenous knowledge, which can preserve
and create cultural identity. This is particularly significant in New Zealand given the
importance of tangata whenua traditions and knowledge of place
The regenerative approach potentially delivers the greatest positive outcomes for human
communities and culture, as well as ecosystems and the built environment. It would also
contribute towards offsetting the ongoing negative environmental impacts of the existing
building stock and reduce the percentage of energy-dependent new buildings.
ES 4.1
vii
ES 4.2
This research document explores short, medium and long-term timeframes for implementing the
approaches discussed, as well as possible benefits derived over these timeframes.
In the short term (five years), eco-efficiency is already rapidly transforming businessas-usual
in the built environment.
In the medium term (40 years), cradle-to-cradle, restorative and regenerative developments may
provide a more suitable built environment for humans in a changing context.
In the long and extra-long term (80- to several hundred years), a regenerative approach to the
built environment will more likely ensure a continuous suitable environment for humans and
other species.
ES 4.3
The different approaches pose a number of challenges, primarily associated with the current
lack of an integrated approach to development.
Because cradle-to-cradle, restorative and regenerative development are aligned with a wholesystems approach to the built environment, they also pose potential challenges in terms of
current methods for dividing land and the consequent legal boundaries for larger scale projects.
There are, however, opportunities for central government organisations and others to show
leadership and take New Zealand forward to a sustainable built environment, by helping
develop momentum for adopting these approaches.
To realise those opportunities, short-term adoption of cradle-to-cradle, restorative and
regenerative approaches is needed to produce New Zealand examples and allow capitalisation of
the long-term benefits. This could take several forms: individual projects could eventually
transform the built environment in a building-by-building, or development-by-development
way; or concepts could be applied to neighbourhoods, larger developments, sections of cities,
suburbs or whole new towns to more effectively demonstrate the benefits of a systems-based
approach to design.
viii
Introduction
This research document Rethinking our built environments: Towards a sustainable future
presents findings from a study of several approaches capable of contributing towards a fully
sustainable built environment in New Zealand. It examines the value and opportunities for
central government organisations of adopting one or all of them to achieve this goal. This
research document:
identifies the environmental, social, cultural and economic benefits for each approach
The format used to structure the study is based on Fisher and Torberts collaborative inquiry
approach (Fisher and Torbert, 1995), which provided a framework for organising the diverse
range of relevant information gathered, particularly the considerable amount of international
research and literature.
In this section:
Several authors (Reed, 2006; Kellert, 2004; McDonough, 2002) suggest that current
sustainability practice as applied to the built environment is insufficient to achieve a sustainable
environment. The intended outcome of green or high performance design is to do less
harm; a relative improvement to what exists now. Sustainable development or achieving a
steady state is neutral or 100 per cent less bad (McDonough, 2002).
According to these authors, the goal of a sustainable built environment is restoration or
regeneration. This implies a living or whole-systems approach to development which looks at
the human and non-human ecology of the built environment. In taking a whole-systems
approach, a more expansive notion of the built environment is required, one where dynamic
relationships exist between a greater number of built and un-built elements and where a
balanced, sustainable relationship between these elements is explored (Moffat et al, 2008).
A systems approach to development is not new (Reed, 2007a). Patrick Geddes (18541932),
the father of regional planning, emphasised connections between the city and the countryside.
Geddes developed a theory of biopolis, a two-pronged approach to viewing the city as an
organic entity (Heinonen et al, 2006). Moffatt et al (2008) refer to 1930s German landscape
architect, Leberecht Migge, who formulated and implemented principles of urban metabolism in
developing social housing for workers a balanced socio-ecological metabolism for organics.
More recently, the oil shocks of the 1970s contributed towards a groundswell of thinking about
sustainability, ecology and landscape, which built on the thinking of people such as McHarg
(Design with Nature) and Leopold (A Sand County Almanac) and their understanding of
connections between nature and humans. Decreasing oil prices and increased economic security
during the 1980s curtailed the development of a critical mass to take these concepts forward.
The concepts explored in this research document have percolated under the surface of
conventional approaches to the built environment for decades. However, the increased focus on
the whole-systems approach within the current global context is new. The majority of the
worlds population now live in urban environments. Urban development is rapid, and its
environmental effects are immense and long lasting. Preventing development is unrealistic.
There is, however, a need for a more sustainable built environment, which recognises this more
expansive notion of the built environment and which looks to the concepts of restorative and
regenerative development.
This section provides the background and explanation for the concepts that form the basis of
this research document.
In this section:
descriptions of the various concepts for developing a sustainable built environment (3.2)
definitions of key sustainability/regeneration concepts: regenerative, restorative, cradleto-cradle and eco-efficient development how they connect with each other, and how
they differ
a description of what business-as-usual means in the current New Zealand context, and
how it fits with the key sustainability concepts
identification of the key proponents of the concepts, and the main reference material
available
3.2 Definitions
Regenerative development
Regenerative development acknowledges humans, as well as their developments, social
structures and cultural concerns, as an inherent and indivisible part of ecosystems. It sees
human development as a means to create optimum health in ecosystems. Understanding the
unique and diverse human and non-human elements of each place is a crucial part of
regenerative development (Cole et al, 2006; Reed, 2007b).
In using a regenerative approach, development is the outcome and design is the means of
achieving it.
Regenerative development is a departure from the idea that the best buildings can be is neutral
in relation to the living world. It implies that built environments can be designed to produce
more energy and resource than they consume, and to transform and filter waste into healthgiving resources (Storey and Pedersen Zari, 2007). Reed (2007b) describes this approach to
design as building capacity not things.
Regenerative development aims to restore or create the capacity of ecosystems and
biogeochemical cycles (carbon, hydrological, nitrogen, etc) to function optimally without
constant human intervention. The process creates new potential, as humans are able to evolve
with the ecosystems they are part of.
A systems-based approach is crucial to regenerative design and development. Buildings are not
considered as individual objects, but instead are designed as parts of larger systems allowing
complex and mutually beneficial interactions between the built environment, the living world
and human inhabitants. This ensures that a constantly dynamic and responsive built
environment evolves over time. This is a key difference between regenerative design and ecoefficiency.
Reed (2007b) suggests that regenerative development encompasses the other concepts described
below. For example, a regenerative design approach would already be restorative, cradle-tocradle and eco-efficient (in terms of being sustainable or zero negative environmental impact).
[Appendix A includes guidance on how to recognise regenerative development.]
Restorative development
Restorative design and development acknowledges that human activities have caused significant
negative impacts on the natural environment. It seeks to return polluted, degraded or damaged
sites back to a state of acceptable health through human intervention. Reed (2007b) defines it as
humans doing things to nature. Cole et al (2006) point out that while a restored condition
can evolve positively after the intervention, the success of the process is usually dependent on
further human management. Examples of restorative developments are brownfield remediation
and wetlands restoration projects.
Cradle-to-cradle development
Cradle-to-cradle (eco-effectiveness) design and development, or eco-effectiveness can be
described as the next step on from eco-efficiency because it moves beyond simply reducing
environmental impact (less bad) to the creation of products, buildings or systems with
beneficial environmental or social outcomes (McDonough and Braungart, 2002). It takes a
systems approach to designing buildings or industrial systems that perform highly without any
negative environmental or social consequences.
Cradle-to-cradle design has also been described as a business strategy that generates ecological
and social, as well as economic prosperity. The cradle-to-cradle concept views population
growth as a benefit not a burden, because of the opportunity for cradle-to-cradle consumption.
A cradle-to-cradle approach to design aims to restore the health of water, soil and the
atmosphere. It eliminates the idea of waste by proposing that waste can equal food. Products
and building components should be 100 per cent biodegradable or 100 per cent recyclable to
avoid cross-contamination of the waste and resource streams. This moves from a paradigm of
cradle-to-grave, which is a linear use of resource resulting in waste, to one with a cyclic use of
resource eliminated waste. The cradle-to-cradle future of industry is seen to be a world of
abundance rather than one of limits.
[Appendix B includes The Hannover Principles, a series of nine principles developed by
William McDonough for EXPO 2000 in Hannover, Germany, to describe cradle-to-cradle
development.]
Eco-efficiency approach
The term eco-efficiency was coined by the World Business Council for Sustainable
Development (WBCSD) in its 1992 publication Changing Course. It is based on the concept of
creating more goods and services while using fewer resources and producing less waste and
pollution.
Eco-efficiency is achieved through the delivery of competitively priced goods and services that
satisfy human needs and bring quality of life while progressively reducing environmental
impacts of goods and resource intensity throughout the entire life cycle to a level at least in line
with the Earths estimated carrying capacity (DeSimone et al, 2000).
The starting point for eco-efficiency is minimising waste, pollution and natural resource
depletion. The eco-efficient approach is a carrying capacity approach it is focused on
reducing the footprint of activities and, in particular, delivery of goods and services, while still
satisfying human needs. Ultimately eco-efficiency looks to neutralise the effects of
development by achieving a steady state between the resources used and the resources
remaining. It does not seek to achieve positive environmental outcomes.
[Appendix C includes an eco-efficiency checklist by Birkeland (2002) that outlines a number of
categories for the reduced environmental impacts associated with an eco-efficient development.]
Integrated approach
A number of techniques, frameworks and processes can be combined to create an integrated
approach to planning, design and development to achieve the most effective use of resources.
The essence of the integrated approach is to co-ordinate planning and management activities to
reconcile conflicting priorities and maximise the synergy between complementary aspects of the
built environment such as, buildings, transport, urban design, and infrastructure.
An integrated approach may result in regenerative, restorative, eco-efficient or conventional
development outcomes, depending upon the motivation and knowledge of the design team.
Public participation can link with an integrated approach to improve project outcomes even
further, in particular by bringing in site-specific knowledge and increasing local ownership.
Including views from outside the design team can significantly improve understanding of the
issues associated with a particular development.
Business-as-usual
For the purpose of this research document, business-as-usual in the New Zealand built
environment includes conventional building design and green or high performance building
design. Most existing buildings and new buildings take into account few, if any, environmental
issues in their design or use. However, a growing number of new buildings are now designed to
be more sustainable, driven in part by increased market demand, and this is rapidly changing
business-as-usual in New Zealand.
The Green Star building rating tools, developed by the New Zealand Green Building Council,
are also contributing to the change. Green Star takes into account a variety of different
assessment criteria for building performance. 1 These reflect current trends in sustainable
building, which tend to focus on individual building performance, primarily around: reducing
energy and water use; reducing pollution or damaging emissions; improving indoor air quality;
increasing the use of renewable or sustainable materials; taking transport issues into account;
and considering sustainable land use.
Drivers for the increasing demand for sustainable building include: lower operating costs;
increased occupant satisfaction and health; increased adaptability of the building; an increased
understanding of the necessity of addressing environmental issues; and a general global trend
towards sustainable building (Fullbrook et al, 2006).
www.greenstar.co.nz
Figure 3.1 replicates Reeds trajectory of environmentally responsible design (adopted from
Reed, 2007b), which shows how society might move through the concepts towards a
regenerative environment. As Reed (2007b) points out, these are not necessarily steps but
more like an evolutionary spiral because the process continually evolves in a gradual unfolding
or emergence as the field changes.
Figure 3.1: Trajectory of environmentally responsible design
Regenerating system
Regenerative design
Humans intentionally participate as
nature actively co-evolving the whole
system
Living system
Understanding
Whole system
Restorative design
Humans doing things to nature assisting
the evolution of sub-systems
Sustainable design
Neutral 100% less bad (McDonough)
Degenerating system
Conventional practice
One step better than breaking the law
(Croxton)
Figure 3.2 (on page 11) provides a summary and comparison of the development and design
concepts, and how they relate to each other. They move along a continuum from left to right,
with conventional, business-as-usual approaches on the left, and the concept requiring the most
change in thinking, regenerative development, at the far right. The diagram is not intended to
be strictly linear.
The top of Figure 3.2 shows the relationship and overlaps between various concepts. Indeed, it
shows almost all the concepts can contribute in some way to improving New Zealands built
environment.
The centre section of the diagram provides a summarised definition of each concept. The
bottom section identifies key reference material for those requiring greater detail.
Figure 3.2 uses the terminology in Figure 3.1 to explain the connection between Reeds
concepts (restoration, reconciliatory and regeneration), and the terms eco-efficiency and cradleto-cradle as described by McDonough and Braungart (2002). References to the terms bioinspired design and ecological design are commonly associated with leading-edge
sustainability design and, while not further analysed in this document, have been included in the
diagram for clarity.
Conventional and eco-efficiency concepts in the left-hand columns are separated from the
approaches that seek to maximise mutually-beneficial interactions between the human and nonhuman elements of the built environment. The gap between the two represents the shift in
thinking that is required to achieve a fully sustainable built environment.
10
Integrated approach
Conventional
Green
Sustainable
Businessas-usual
Restorative
design
Reconciliatory
design
Regenerative
development
Eco-efficiency
Cradle-tocradle
Bio-inspired
design
Ecological
design
Conventional
Little or no
consideration is
given to the
environmental
impact of the
design.
Designs generally
aim to meet
minimum legal
requirements for
the lowest first cost
price.
A rapidly expanding
segment of
business-as-usual
is termed green
and moving
towards becoming
more sustainable.
Eco-efficiency
Restorative design
Green design:
Questions how
humans can restore
Does not challenge
ecosystems
current production
through
methods or
development.
consumption patterns
that have negative
Acknowledges
environmental impact
environmental
(termed bad design).
damage done by
human activities
Minimises energy
and seeks to
use, pollution and
redress this through
waste (termed less
further
bad design).
development.
Sustainable design:
Is a process of
Achieves neutral
humans managing
environmental impact
and manipulating
and maximum
ecosystems.
efficiency.
Cradle-to-cradle
Bio-inspired design
Ecological design
Questions and redesigns Design that has an
Design that creates
the goals and methods of
understanding of the
processes that are
design to produce
relationships between
compatible with
products, buildings or
biology/ecology and
nature and may be
systems without negative
humans to improve
mutually beneficial
environmental or social
human technology
for improved human
outcomes (termed good
(biomimicry) or to
and non-human
design).
improve human
health.
psychological well Restores health of
Design strategies
being (biophilia).
water/soil/air.
may be modelled on
ecosystems.
May result in
Eliminates waste by using
regenerative,
100% biodegradable or
restorative, eco-efficient
100% recyclable
or conventional
materials. Waste then
outcomes depending
becomes resource. This
on the understanding of
is termed waste equals
the design team. It has
food.
the potential to
May extend to economic,
contribute to
business and social
regenerative design
structures also.
goals.
(McDonough and
Braungart, 2002,
Reed, 2007b)
(McDonough and
Braungart, 2002)
(McDonough and
Braungart, 2002)
(Couchman, 2007;
Reed, 2007)
Reconciliatory
design
Acknowledges
humans as an
integral part of
nature and that
the two operate
in one system.
Regenerative development
Questions how humans can
participate in ecosystems
through development to create
optimum health.
Sees humans, human
developments, social structures
and cultural concerns as an
inherent part of ecosystems.
Seeks to create or restore
capacity of ecosystems and
bio-geological cycles to function
without human management.
Understanding the diversity and
uniqueness of each place
(socially, culturally and
environmentally) is crucial to
the design.
Sees the design process as
ongoing and indefinite.
(Reed, 2007)
Integrated approach
Coordination of planning and management activities associated with land use and land resources (including buildings, transport, urban design and infrastructure) to achieve additional value.
May result in regenerative, restorative, eco-efficient or conventional outcomes.
United Nations Division for Sustainable Development (2004)
11
In this section:
Value is defined as merit. This is the reason why a particular path should be taken, or the
initial benefit it would provide. Opportunities refer to the consequences we could expect
from taking that path whats in it for us if we do.
Value and opportunities are identified in several ways in order to give us a richer picture
of the benefits associated with each concept. This allows a more detailed consideration of
what could be gained by taking a more, rather that less, complex systems approach to the
built environment.
an assessment of implementing the different approaches over the short, medium and long
terms (4.4)
12
In the authors opinion, a sustainable built environment is not possible without adopting an
integrated approach. In fact, the definition of a whole-systems approach to a sustainable built
environment assumes an integrated approach will be used to bring the various components
together and develop the necessary sense of place.
Participants familiarity with business-as-usual may sway them toward adopting conventional
outcomes rather than risk working with unfamiliar concepts such as cradle-to-cradle, restorative
and regenerative development. Little data exists to quantify the value and opportunities
associated with taking an integrated approach, but the evidence available is summarised in the
bullet points below. The information comes from the literature review, input from the external
peer reviewers and the authors professional knowledge.
The building blocks exist: New Zealand already has a limited policy framework in place
to support adopting an integrated approach. It is consistent with the Resource
Management Act 1991 and amendments, as well as other legislation such as the Local
Government Act 2002 and the Land Transport Management Act 2003. This framework
may need considerable strengthening however.
Wider benefits for the built environment: Adopting an integrated approach can deliver
wider benefits than conventional development, including improved access to
transportation, community facilities and employment opportunities. Benefits include
improvements to public facilities, new connections, new urban spaces, comprehensive
environmental improvements and other community-building activities, in tandem with
new built form and major infrastructure (Fuller, 2008). This is consistent with urban
development approaches such as Smart Growth 2 and Transit-oriented Development, 3
which are already being explored and implemented in New Zealand.
Provides a bridge from where we are to where we need to be: Because it is holistic, an
integrated approach naturally aligns with regenerative and restorative development and
design. It may potentially act as a bridge for moving from eco-efficiency to a more
ecologically positive outcome, particularly if it extends beyond the design professions to
include project stakeholders, professional institutions and governing authorities (Yang
et al, 2005).
Wider benefits beyond the build environment: Because an integrated approach focuses
on social, economic and spatial integration of the built environment, it can deliver wider
positive outcomes, in the areas of health or economics for example. It can also be
expanded to address other issues, including responses to climate change and increasing
community resilience.
Smart Growth is anti-sprawl development that advocates compact, walkable cities, with a variety of
transport, mixed use and housing.
13
Identifies the best solutions: An integrated approach can help identify the most
productive solutions in terms of cost, functionality and sustainability (United Nations
Division for Sustainable Development, 2004). It allows trade-offs to be explored, such as
between building design and infrastructure requirements, or between urban form and
resource efficiency (Moffatt, 2006). Such a process allows a development team to
understand: where elements of the development should be located; how they should be
designed; how resources and energy should be consumed; how the land has and will
develop over time; and where services should be supplied (CABE, 2007). Opportunities
arising from relationships between elements of the built environment may result in the
value and capacity of a whole development or system becoming greater that the sum of its
parts.
14
Table 4.1:
Building
Eco-efficiency
Single issue response.
Focused on individual building
performance.
Focused on reducing negative
environment impact.
Reduction of activity footprint.
Reduction of energy intensity of
goods and services.
Enhanced material recyclability.
Maximised use of sustainable
resources (Birkeland, 2002).
Cradle-to-cradle
Focused on positive environmental
outcomes.
Focused on the process rather than
specifically looking at buildings,
humans or ecosystems.
Waste is seen as potential resource.
Emphasis on living systems and the
creation of producing and cycling
systems (McDonough, 2005).
Products should either have no waste
or be 100% recyclable.
Restorative design
Focused on positive
environmental outcomes.
Understands buildings as
existing within a wider
environmental context.
Regenerative design
Focused on positive environmental outcomes.
Employs a flexible approach to building (Natural Logic Inc, 2003).
Uses advanced building techniques that emphasise the simplest
solutions (Natural Logic Inc, 2003).
Buildings are considered as elements of the landscape, rather than
as individual objects.
Buildings are responsive to the local environment (Lyle, 1993).
May incorporate strategies for positive psychological outcomes,
such as: the use of vernacular design (to add to a sense of place
and to provide climatically appropriate design); and the use of
biophilic design (the use of forms from nature) (Kellert, 2004).
At higher development density, public transportation systems become more feasible. This is due to increased diversity within shorter distances and encourages greater non-vehicular transport such as walking and cycling
(Register, 1990).
The width between buildings is critical to how well streets work and their aesthetic qualities it is a matter of appropriate scale.
Buildings clad in new generations of energy-making materials could alter their form to track the sun, enable greater shading or sunlight penetration while also producing energy.
Infrastructure
Transport
If buildings or neighbourhoods provide their own energy and water, and export energy or other resources to other areas, then pressure on infrastructure diminishes.
Enhanced material recyclability.
Maximise sustainable use of
resources.
Materials selection considers
embodied energy.
Use of recycled materials.
Streets have a place function. This means that they contribute positively to how users of the built environment experience their surroundings, and how easily navigable those surrounding are.
The movement framework can affect how much people walk or cycle, the level of public transport use, the sustainability of the community and its environment and quality of life (Department of Transport et al, 2007).
Good design is fundamental to achieving high-quality, attractive places that are socially, economically and environmentally sustainable. Places often fail because of poor relationships between dwellings and streets (Department
of Transport et al, 2007).
Walkable neighbourhoods are typically characterised by having a range of facilities available to residents that can be accessed comfortably on foot. Making the local environment convenient and attractive to walk in can help
enhance the vibrancy of a community and reduce reliance on motor transport (Department of Transport, 2007).
The design of transport infrastructure must incorporate drainage, utilities and street lighting. Using streets as more than transport corridors for motor vehicles enhances their usability and connections to the built environment.
Urban design
Less connected
More connected
15
16
Table 4.2:
Conventional
Cradleto-cradle
Restoration
Regeneration
Environmental
Economic
Social
Cultural
1.
2.
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**
3.
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**
4.
***
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**
5.
**
***
6.
7.
8.
9.
**
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*
*
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**
***
**
13. Mutually beneficial relationships are created between people and place.
***
**
17
The only benefit of a conventional approach may be that it is less challenging because it works
within the current mode of thinking in terms of design, and within existing economic and legal
frameworks (McDonough and Braungart, 2002). This may mean that projects can be completed
in shorter time periods, having potential economic benefits because there is no initial delay as
people learn about new ways of working (Reed, 2006).
Reduced environmental impact is a significant benefit and perhaps the main motivation behind
eco-efficiency. Reduced (rather than no) environment impact is useful because it delays
environmental degradation while new methodologies and technologies are devised to remediate
or reverse past environmental damage (Couchman, 2007). A functioning and healthy natural
environment is vital for providing the ecosystem goods and services that enable humans to
survive and thrive. This will be further discussed in subsequent sections.
There are substantial and well-documented links between a more sustainable built environment
and human health (WHO, 1992). Reductions in air, water and soil pollution lead to an
improved quality of indoor and outdoor urban environment for humans.
Thomas et al (2002) links increasing health care costs with non-sustainable built development.
There are also substantial economic impacts of ill-health leading to drops in human productivity
at work (Leaman and Bordass, 2001). This will be described in the following sections.
18
A compelling economic case for sustainable building in New Zealand is made by Fullbrook et al
(2006). Reduced financial costs with such an approach include:
lower operating costs for energy, water and waste of up to 50 per cent
The psychological benefits of an eco-efficient approach to design suggest that resource efficient
architecture may be more appealing to a wide constituency of building users than conventional
buildings, leading to a marketing advantage (Storey and Pedersen Zari, 2006). Fullbrook et al
(2006) also discuss financial incentives of eco-efficient development. Benefits include:
19
A focus on development or design that seeks to reduce environmental impact is more difficult
than a conventional approach to design. This may increase the creativity of design teams, and
the innovation of solutions to meet these increased challenges (Haggard et al, 2006).
De Groot et al (2002) examine the importance of the goods and services which ecosystems
provide and present an overview of recent research demonstrating the value of healthy
ecosystems to humans. Costanza et al (1997) state that:
The services of ecological systems ... are critical to the functioning of the Earths lifesupport system. They contribute to human welfare, both directly and indirectly, and
therefore represent part of the total economic value of the planet. We have estimated the
current economic value of ... ecosystem services ... to be an average of US$33 trillion per
year this must be considered a minimum estimate. Global gross national product total is
around US$18 trillion per year.
Daily et al (2000) suggest that such ecological accounting has been used to determine that, in
most cases, it is more economically advantageous to conserve or restore aspects of ecosystems
than to replace them with human-made systems.
Development approaches that aim for positive environmental impact and that understand and
support existing ecosystems may increase the productivity of land. Remediating polluted
brownfield sites and waterways for example, enables plants and animals (including humans) to
grow and thrive more readily. This means yields of produce or other useful resources may
increase and result in economic benefits. Social and cultural benefits also accrue due to
increased employment and higher levels of health.
20
10
Wilson (1984) argues that there is an innate psychological need for humans to be in a positive
relationship with other life forms, and that there is substantial evidence to make such a claim.
Living forms and their geometric characteristics must be preserved because of the neurological
nourishment they provide. This is echoed by Heerwagen and Orians, who state that a
biologically impoverished planet will not only reduce humanitys economic options, it will
diminish our emotional lives as well (Kellert and Wilson, 1993). A more enduring relationship
with nature, may positively affect human behaviour, which is described as the most significant
underlying cause of environmental degradation (Walsh, 1992).
11
Reed (2007b) argues that place-based approaches to increasing the sustainability of the built
environment are not inconsistent with global-scale approaches, and that place-based
engagement can frame and integrate planetary issues so that they become more accessible and
meaningful for people. This has environmental benefits as people may begin to positively
address global human-caused environment degradation at a local level. With a place-based
approach, people are able to engage with the issues without feeling overwhelmed, and to
achieve tangible, potentially visible results that directly benefit their local ecosystems and
communities.
12
Understanding how complex local ecosystems work, and possibly how they worked before
development or human intervention, leads to a better understanding of how new development
can integrate into, engage with, and possibly regenerate an existing ecosystem (Reed, 2007a).
Understanding existing ecosystems and the relationships within them involves not only knowing
how elements of a system behave and what might influence this behaviour in general, but also
requires in-depth local knowledge of a specific place.
The benefit of an increased and more accurate understanding of a specific place enables more
effective development decisions to be made. This could have economic benefits in avoiding
development that will not work well for environmental, social or cultural reasons in a given
place. By understanding local microclimates and environments, unique or beneficial elements
of a place may potentially be taken advantage of in development.
21
13
Acknowledging and celebrating an increased respect for, and care of, the living world reinforces
both environmental and psychological well-being. Kellert (2005) states for example that:
... communities with higher environmental quality [have] more positive environmental
values and a higher quality of life, whereas those with lower environmental quality [tend]
to reveal less environmental interest and [have] a lower quality of life.
Regeneration therefore is a process of engagement rather than a set of outcomes. This process
of engagement has significant environmental, economic, social and cultural benefits related to
community building and participation in addition to those already outlined in the sections 4.3.2
4.3.4.
[Appendix B includes a list of Aspects of Regenerative Development.]
14
22
15
Several researchers describe regenerative development as able to create stronger more equitable
communities through its participatory, integrated and locally-based approach (Couchman, 2007,
Reed, 2007). Haggard (2006) describes such a process as enabling a:
... reawakening [of] the connection people experience between themselves and the places
they inhabit.
This is particularly significant in New Zealand given existing tangata whenua traditions and
knowledge related to specific places. The importance of an approach to development that
includes indigenous knowledge is outlined by Loomis (2000), who states that there is a growing
realisation that indigenous knowledge can contribute to the success of a development project.
This could strengthen tauiwi (non-Mori) New Zealanders connection to and celebration of
place through an understanding of the knowledge of tangata whenua and potentially through
cross-cultural collaboration. Voyle and Simmons (1999) also point out potential positive health
outcomes for tangata whenua when community development is participatory and empowering.
Political efficacy, improved quality of community life, and improved social justice are also
listed as benefits of collaborative community development strategies, and are consistent with a
regenerative approach to development.
23
McIndoe et al (2005) describe several environmental, economic and social benefits of creating
or maintaining local character in urban design. They suggest there are links between the
conservation of non-renewable resources and increased local character. They also discuss an
enhanced sense of identity among residents and their greater participation in maintenance and
care for where they live. Economic benefits include: a premium for house and land values; a
competitive edge created by a point of difference; assistance in promoting and branding
regions; and the attraction of skilled workers and new enterprises to the region. Unique and
distinctly New Zealand urban environments may also have benefits for the tourism industry.
16
24
Table 4.3:
Medium term
(40 years)
Eco-efficiency
May continue to
contribute to the rapid
transformation of
business-as-usual
resulting in decreased
environmental
degradation.
Cradle-to-cradle
May contribute to a
May be incorporated
change in thinking and into a regenerative
more realised projects. approach.
Restorative
design
May contribute to a
May be incorporated
change in thinking and into a regenerative
more realised projects. approach.
Regenerative
development
May contribute to
changes in thinking
about the ecological
goals of development.
Cherry picking of the
easier parts of
regenerative design
may continue to
appear in projects.
Long term
(80 years)
A dynamic, fully
sustainable built
environment may
emerge with greater
ecological, economic,
social and cultural
health.
Ecosystems and biodiversity indicators
may become healthier.
Built environment
becomes more robust
as climate continues to
change.
Figure 4.1 builds on the information in Table 4.3 by using a timeline to show how the shift will
occur from a conventional approach to a regenerative or fully sustainable built environment.
Rather than a simple transition, a paradigm shift is needed.
Figure 4.1: Achieving positive environmental outcomes
Paradigm shift
Conventional
NEGATIVE
ENVIRONMENTAL
OUTCOME
Cradle-to-cradle, restorative
and regenerative
development
POSITIVE OUTCOME
Eco-efficiency,
green, sustainable
ZERO STATE
5 years
40 years
Business as usual
in New Zealand
25
26
27
Biological systems are evolving and dynamic, rather than steady state or finished (Sahtouris,
2008). A fully sustainable built environment will need to incorporate and address this
dynamism. A dynamic environment is potentially more resilient, as it is more adaptive to
change. This is relevant in the long term as the climate continues to change.
As demonstrated in Table 4.2, a significant benefit of a regenerative approach to development
is its positive outcomes for human society and culture. These are less present in the restorative
and cradle-to-cradle approaches. The built environment is not responsible for all factors that
contribute to healthy communities, but a regenerative approach does potentially positively affect
aspects of this, such as cultural identity, personal satisfaction and psychological health.
Because a regenerative approach includes more than just a small design team in the design
processes and decision-making, this may contribute to the recognition of the indivisibility of
environmental, economic, social and cultural health.
Many projects are fast tracked and sustainability does not feature strongly, if at all, in
many of the day-to-day decision-making procedures. Even if a sustainable approach is
adopted in the early concept stages of a project design, it is often ill defined and lost when
it comes to the real time and cost pressures of the project programme.
COST European Co-operation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research is one of the longest
running European instruments supporting co-operation among scientists and researchers across Europe.
28
There is a poor link between high- and low-level decision-makers and although
designers/technicians are often aware of sustainability issues, such issues are not often
included at high level and this prohibits their implementation and inclusion in practice. In
other words, design for sustainability is often appreciated by designers and there are an
increasing number of buildings that demonstrate sustainable design, but it is rarely a
priority for high-level decision-makers.
There are tools available to assist with incorporating sustainability into design, but they
are often theoretically based and do not take sufficient account of the needs of practice.
Also, there is a lack of knowledge and skills relating to what tools to use and how to use
them, and what indicators and benchmarks to relate to specific projects.
Most projects are driven by capital costs. There is a lack of information relating to
whole-life cost-benefits. Consequently, sustainability always appears as an additional
capital cost, whereas on a whole-life cost basis it can result in large cost savings.
There is a lack of knowledge transfer from one project to another, both in terms of the
positive benefits and the lessons learnt from any less successful measures. There is a
tendency to greenwash projects and not make public any failures that occur. This has
sometimes resulted in a cynical attitude to sustainability, with rumours of failure
discouraging others. There is little hard evidence of success because designers and
developers are afraid of exposing failure.
29
Case Studies
case studies that illustrate real life application of the concepts of regenerative, restorative,
cradle-to-cradle and eco-efficient development.
Limited real world examples of fully sustainable development means much of the discussion in
this document is derived by considering potential benefits. This section presents real examples
to help show how those theoretical benefits translate into actual value, notwithstanding that
qualitative benefits are difficult to measure. While the four case studies do not provide an indepth analysis, they do provide a starting point for exploring the practical benefits of the various
approaches.
Each case study is formatted slightly differently, as consistent information is not available for
each. Some of the projects are in different stages of development.
Photo:
www.ecologicaldevelopment.com/willowschool.html
Materials used in the construction of the buildings used recycled or renewable materials, do not
emit toxins, and were locally sourced where possible.
30
Outcomes
Willow School typifies a regenerative development, focusing on:
a living systems approach to development, which incorporates the development into the
existing ecosystems and works to restore them
Commentary
The Willow School encourages the belief that everything is part of a complex living system a
key component of a regenerative approach to development. The school buildings and wider site
design integrate with the curriculum to provide extended educational opportunities for students,
thereby incorporating the regenerative approach into the education system. Regenesis Group
actively worked with the site developers to help them understand and develop a sense of place,
which was then reflected in the ultimate development plan. Incorporation of high specification
green buildings (two LEED Gold and Platinum buildings) into the physical design of the school,
along with use of constructed stormwater management systems and other water management
techniques, makes a significant contribution towards regeneration of the site.
31
Outcomes
The Living Water Gardens typifies a restorative design project, focusing on:
Commentary
The Living Water Garden exhibits characteristics of both restorative and regenerative design
approaches, showing that these approaches are not mutually exclusive. The project recognises
that it may be difficult to measure the success of all aspects of a design in the short timeframe of
a human lifetime and exemplifies designing for extra long timeframes.
Development of the Living Water Garden however, involved relocating thousands of people to a
new residential location to enable the Gardens construction. This is an inherent conflict
between the values of the development to the wider community versus the rights of previous
occupants.
32
Waitangi Park, Wellington, New Zealand, designed by Wraight Athfield Landscape and
Architecture (www.wellingtonwaterfront.co.nz)
5.3 Cradle-to-cradle
The Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies,
Cleveland, USA
Designer: McDonough and Partners
Owner: Oberlin College, Cleveland
McDonough and Partners designed the building to function like a tree. The building is powered
by the sun, embedded in local nutrient flows and beneficially produces more energy than it
consumes. Solar power is collected via rooftop cells. Wastewater is purified by a constructed
ecosystem that breaks down and digests organic matter and releases clean material. Design of
the building was a collaborative approach with students, designers, external consultants and
future occupiers.
From 1993 through 1998, designing the Lewis Center included these steps:
a group of students and David Orr, a lecturer at the College, researched alternative
technologies and design strategies and prepared an initial proposal for the building
student and faculty input was sought to define building goals and design it to meet their
needs
thirteen public design input sessions were held to solicit community ideas
students designed projects to further look into what specific systems and products the new
building should incorporate
the building is operational. Visitors to the Centers website can view output from the
campus resource monitoring system. Students at the college can monitor their water and
energy use in real time to enable conservation of resources.
33
Outcomes
The Adam Joseph Lewis Center is a very young system. The orchard, wetland and ecological
wastewater treatment systems continue to develop structure and function. Mechanical systems
are still being installed, adjusted and modified. The College considers that these changes imply
a steady increase in the performance of the Center, with greater improvement to come as the
system matures.
Commentary
The Adam Joseph Lewis Center exhibits the key characteristics of the nine Hannover Principles
devised by McDonough, which exemplify the concept of cradle-to-cradle development. The
building recognises the rights of humans and nature to co-exist, and their interdependence. The
building designers and occupiers accept responsibility for the consequences of design and the
ecological footprint the development leaves on the environment. The long-term value of the
Center is demonstrated through its incorporation into the educational structure of the college.
The Center is not only a demonstration of cradle-to-cradle for the wider community but a
fundamental learning tool for students.
Oberlin College is researching the short and long-term evolution of the system. Readers should
also refer to a number of post-occupancy studies done on the building. 5 At this stage the Center
is not performing as well as originally thought, highlighting the evolutionary nature of the
system and the potential challenges associated with adopting new approaches. It is, however,
delivering valuable lessons and learning opportunities.
34
US National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Torcellini and Pless (November, 2004) Technical Paper
NREL/TP-550-33180 -Energy Performance Evaluation of an Educational Facility: The Adam Joseph Lewis
Center for Environmental Studies, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
(http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy05osti/33180.pdf).
5.4 Eco-efficiency
Conservation House, Wellington, New Zealand
Architect: Architecture+
Building owner: The Wellington Company
Building occupier: Department of Conservation
Project requirements:
Outcomes
Conservation House uses a number of passive, mechanical and staff behaviour strategies to
meet the project requirements. Eco-efficient attributes include:
capture of waste heat produced by the buildings heat pumps heats hot water
Digital Addressable Lighting Interface (DALI) provides for automatic daylight dimming
of perimeter lights
low-flow fittings and fixtures with motion detectors located in bathrooms to reduce water
and energy consumption
transport alternatives provided through location next to bus stop and a bicycle park within
the building
a chilled-beam system uses water and air to control the internal environment. Cold water
circulates through a cooling coil, the surrounding cooled air descends to the office space
and is replaced by rising warmer air, creating an airflow cycle
35
the floor on the stairwell is produced from recycled car tyres. Soundproof panels in
meeting rooms are made from recycled milk bottle tops
the building design results in 60 per cent less water use and 40 per cent less energy
experimental urban, small-scale, vertical axis wind turbines for energy generation
Commentary
Conservation House provides an excellent illustration of eco-efficient design and the benefits of
a partnership approach to development. Of particular relevance is the reuse of an existing
building, rather than new construction. The refurbishment is very focused on the building and
its occupiers, which is consistent with eco-efficient design, and is essentially a single-issue
response. The approach taken in the refurbishment is directed towards a neutral impact, but
ultimately still degrades the environment.
36
What are the negative environmental impacts of New Zealands built environment? What
would be the consequences of continuing with business-as-usual?
What are the New Zealand-specific barriers to adopting development models beyond ecoefficiency in improving the built environment? What changes are required in the
business-as-usual approach to achieve regenerative development, for example? How do
land ownership and established legal land boundaries contribute to, or hinder,
regenerative approaches? Could the existing legislative and regulatory environment
accommodate a regenerative approach to the built environment? If not, what changes are
required to achieve the transition to regenerative development? How can New Zealand
implement projects that demonstrate such an approach?
How do these development approaches relate to tangata whenua perspectives, needs and
self determination?
How does adoption of these new development approaches link to other sustainability
initiatives currently active in New Zealand, in the public and private sector? Where are
the most effective places to intervene in the current system to affect positive change?
What are the implications of taking an integrated approach to the built environment at a
national, regional and local level. How do participatory approaches to development relate
to these new development approaches?
How can New Zealand learn and benefit from international experiments and experience
in this area?
37
Conclusions
The existing built environment will largely still be in place in 50 years time given the current
rate of building in New Zealand. The continued development of a fully sustainable built
environment will therefore largely involve a retrofit of the existing built environment.
This research document explores different approaches to changing the built environment that
could contribute towards true sustainability. There are considerable benefits associated with
each, although the scale of the benefits change depending on the approach considered and the
timeframe in which it is applied.
This document evaluates each approach in a number of ways, including case study examples,
identifying benefits, and examining implementation over a range of time periods from the
short term (five years), through to the extra long term (80+ years).
A number of key messages emerge from the research document:
cradle-to-cradle, and to a greater extent the restorative and regenerative concepts, are very
different to current or conventional processes for creating and maintaining the built
environment. A considerably wider definition of the built environment is needed to
facilitate implementation of these approaches
of the four concepts investigated, eco-efficiency offers the least direct social and cultural
benefits. The greatest potential economic, social, cultural and environmental benefits are
achieved through a regenerative approach. However, regenerative development also
requires the greatest shift in current thinking
an integrated approach offers considerable value for all the development approaches
discussed.
While there are currently limited real world examples of cradle-to-cradle, restorative and
regenerative developments, those projects that do exist provide valuable insight into their
implementation, and the shortcomings that need to be addressed.
The authors conclude that there are considerable opportunities for central government
organisations and others to take New Zealand forward to a more sustainable built environment,
to lead by example, and to help develop momentum for adoption of these approaches.
Short-term adoption of cradle-to-cradle, restorative and regenerative development is required, to
produce New Zealand examples and demonstration projects, and to allow people to capitalise on
the long-term benefits. This could take several forms. These approaches may be applied to
individual projects with the intention that these eventually transform the urban context on a
building-by-building, or development-by-development basis. Alternatively, concepts could be
applied to neighbourhoods, larger developments, sections of cities, suburbs or potentially new
towns to more effectively demonstrate the benefits of a systems-based approach to design, as
advocated by proponents of cradle-to-cradle, restorative and regenerative development.
38
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Appendix A: Recognising
Regenerative Development
Regenerative development recognises that humans, human developments, social structures and
cultural concerns are an inherent part of ecosystems.
It investigates how humans can participate in ecosystems through development, to create
optimum health for both human communities (physically, psychologically, socially, culturally
and economically) and other living organisms and systems.
The development is a positive contributor 6 to the living systems (biotic and human) in
which it occurs.
2.
3.
The development is a source of deeper meaning and significance, and new potential
for all who engage in it.
Understand the whole system or master pattern of place beyond site boundaries.
Translate these patterns into design guidelines.
2.
Understand and base design on local reality (both ecological and cultural) rather than
theory alone.
3.
Understand and align the human aspirations of a project. Understand that the diversity
and uniqueness of each place (socially, culturally and environmentally) is crucial to the
design. Use this to define the project and to create a sense of place.
4.
5.
6.
Design to allow complexity and ongoing feedback and dialogue processes that allow the
development to evolve over long time periods.
7.
8.
Conserve, restore, and regenerate ecosystems. Seek to create or restore the capacity of
ecosystems and bio-geological cycles to function without human management.
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For example, the development may clean water, clean air, build soil, create energy, turn waste into resource
...
Appendix B: Cradle-to-cradle
Development
The Hannover Principles, developed by William McDonough for World EXPO 2000, held in
Hannover, Germany (McDonough, 1992).
1.
2.
Recognise interdependence.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
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Can the product or service be redesigned to make less use of material inputs?
Are there less material-intensive raw materials?
Can existing raw materials be produced or processed in less materially intense ways?
Would higher quality materials create less waste in later stages?
Can water consumption be reduced?
Can water, wastewater treatment, or waste disposal costs be allocated in budgets to encourage greater control?
Can yields be increased by better maintenance, control or other means?
Can waste be utilised?
Can products be made of smaller size, or a difference shape, to minimise material and packaging requirements?
Can the product or service be combined with others to reduce overall material intensity?
Can packaging be eliminated or reduced?
Can the product be reused, remanufactured, or recycled?
Reduce energy intensity of goods and service
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Can toxic dispersion be reduced or eliminated by using alternative raw materials or producing them differently?
Are products designed to ensure safe distribution, use, and disposal?
Can harmful substances be eliminated from production processes?
Can harmful substances generated in use be reduced or eliminated?
Can any remaining harmful substances be recycled or incinerated?
Are remaining harmful substances properly handled during production and disposal?
Are equipment and vehicles properly maintained so that emissions are kept to a minimum?
Extend product durability
Can products or components be made more modular to allow easy upgrading?
Can materials or processes be altered in order to improve longevity?
Can whatever aspects of the product that limit durability be redesigned?
Can maintenance of the product be improved?
Can customers be informed or educated about ways of extending product durability?
Increase the service intensity of goods and service
What services are customers really getting from your product? Can this be provided more effectively or in completely
different ways?
What services will customers need in the future? Can you design new or existing products to meet them?
Is your product providing other services as well as the most obvious one? Can these be accentuated or enhanced?
Can the product or service be integrated or synchronised with others to provide multi-functionally?
Can customers disposal problems be eliminated by providing a take-back service?
Can the properties of the product be accentuated or developed for greater customer value?
Can products be designed to facilitate customer reuse or revalorisation?
Can products be redesigned to make distribution and logistics easier?
Can the product be made easier for customers to dispose of?
Can production be localised to both enhance service and reduce transport needs?
Can products be transported or distributed by alternative means to enhance customer value and reduce environmental
impacts?
Source: Adapted from Birkeland (2002).
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