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A comparative analysis of sustainable building assessment methods

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/1629
ISSN: 22106707
DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2019.101611
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Author
Díaz López, Carmen; Carpio Martínez, Manuel; Martín Morales, María; Zamorano Toro, Montserrat
Date
2019
Subject/s

Sostenibilidad

Edificación residencial

Normativa construcción

Edificios sostenibles

Edificabilidad

Edificio inteligente

Calidad del aire interior

Confort térmico

Unesco Subject/s

3305.14 Viviendas

3305.90 Transmisión de Calor en la Edificación

3322.05 Fuentes no Convencionales de Energía

1203.26 Simulación

Abstract

Since the advent of the first sustainability assessment method, TRYNNS, a large number of widely differing methods have been developed to assess, rate and certify the sustainability of different types of buildings. This study sets out to review, identify, classify and compare today's main assessment methods by analysing their characteristics, structure, scope of application and approach. As a result, 101 current methods have been identified and assigned to 3 groups: systems, standards and tools, plus a recently approved instrument called Level(s). The 36 most representative methods identified have been selected, and have been compared using 4 variables: phase of life cycle applied; sustainability aspects assessed; categories considered; and the type and status of the project assessed. The results have shown that each of the methods separately does not assess all aspects of a sustainable building. Many assess energy and the quality of the interior environment, while few assess more recent social and economic aspects. The considerable number of methods considered and the in-depth analysis performed in this study give extremely valuable insight into the existing evaluation framework, and allows agents to select the method that best responds to their needs. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd

Since the advent of the first sustainability assessment method, TRYNNS, a large number of widely differing methods have been developed to assess, rate and certify the sustainability of different types of buildings. This study sets out to review, identify, classify and compare today's main assessment methods by analysing their characteristics, structure, scope of application and approach. As a result, 101 current methods have been identified and assigned to 3 groups: systems, standards and tools, plus a recently approved instrument called Level(s). The 36 most representative methods identified have been selected, and have been compared using 4 variables: phase of life cycle applied; sustainability aspects assessed; categories considered; and the type and status of the project assessed. The results have shown that each of the methods separately does not assess all aspects of a sustainable building. Many assess energy and the quality of the interior environment, while few assess more recent social and economic aspects. The considerable number of methods considered and the in-depth analysis performed in this study give extremely valuable insight into the existing evaluation framework, and allows agents to select the method that best responds to their needs. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd

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