4.7 Article

Multi-criteria decision-making applied to the sustainability of building structures based on Modern Methods of Construction

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 330, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.129724

Keywords

Sustainability; Construction; Structural design; Life cycle cost; Life cycle assessment; Social life cycle; Multi-criteria decision-making; Modern methods of construction

Funding

  1. MCIN/AEI [PID2020-117056RB-I00]
  2. ERDF A way of making Europe

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This paper examines the sustainability assessment of various modern construction techniques applied to concrete structures of single-family houses. By comparing the life cycle performance of different designs, it is found that considering the three dimensions of sustainability leads to balanced designs.
Since the establishment of the Sustainable Development Goals, great concern has arisen on how to diminish the impacts that result from construction activities. In such context, Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) rise as a powerful way to reduce life cycle impacts through optimizing the consumption of materials. This paper focuses on the sustainability assessment of different modern construction techniques applied to concrete structures of single-family houses. The life cycle performance in terms of sustainability is compared between a conventional reference design, a precast design, a lightweight slab design with pressurized hollow discs, and a design based on double-wall structural elements. The sustainability is assessed through a set of 38 indicators that address not only the economic and environmental response of the designs, but also their social impacts as well. Five of the best known Multi-Criteria Decision-Making (MCDM) techniques (SAW, COPRAS, TOPSIS, VIKOR and MIVES) are applied to derive the life-cycle performance of each design into a single sustainability score. Since there is no consensus on which MCDM method works best in sustainability assessments, a Global Structural Sustainability Index (GSSI) combining and weighting the above is proposed here to aid the analysis of the results obtained. The results show that consideration of the three dimensions of sustainability leads to balanced designs whose preference need not coincide with those derived from each one-dimensional life cycle approach.

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