4.6 Article

Comparative Life-Cycle Assessment of a High-Rise Mass Timber Building with an Equivalent Reinforced Concrete Alternative Using the Athena Impact Estimator for Buildings

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su12114708

Keywords

whole building; cross-laminated timber (CLT); environmental impacts; embodied carbon; cradle-to-grave

Funding

  1. USDA Forest Service Forest Products Laboratory
  2. U.S. Endowment for Forestry & Communities, Inc., Endowment Green Building Partnership-Phase 1 [16-JV-11111137-094]

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Buildings consume large amounts of materials and energy, making them one of the highest environmental impactors. Quantifying the impact of building materials can be critical to developing an effective greenhouse gas mitigation strategy. Using Athena Impact Estimator for Buildings (IE4B), this paper compares cradle-to-grave life-cycle assessment (LCA) results for a 12-story building constructed from cross-laminated timber (CLT) and a functionally equivalent reinforced concrete (RC) building. Following EN 15978 framework, environmental impacts for stages A1-A5 (product to construction), B2, B4, and B6 (use), C1-C4 (end of life), and D (beyond the building life) were evaluated in detail along resource efficiency. For material resource efficiency, total mass of the CLT building was 33.2% less than the alternative RC building. For modules A to C and not considering operational energy use (B6), LCA results show a 20.6% reduction in embodied carbon achieved for the CLT building, compared to the RC building. For modules A to D and not considering B6, the embodied carbon assessment revealed that for the CLT building, 6.57 x 10(5) kg CO2 eq was emitted, whereas for the equivalent RC building, 2.16 x 10(6) kg CO2 eq was emitted, and emissions from CLT building was 70% lower than that from RC building. Additionally, 1.84 x 10(6) kg of CO2 eq was stored in the wood material used in the CLT building during its lifetime. Building material selection should be considered for the urgent need to reduce global climate change impacts.

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