ABSTRACT

Focusing on the recently introduced compulsory course element on sustainability in architecture, the book outlines all of the arguments and provides a comprehensive source of information. The author's insider knowledge of the curriculum structure provides you with an invaluable companion to the new section of the course work. An outline seminar is included allowing the student to relate the theories of sustainability to the practice of study. The professional will also benefit from its focus on the practical translation of sustainable theory.

He calls for changes in the way we build. For change to be widely accepted there have to be convincing reasons why long established practices should be replaced. In the first part of the book he sets out those reasons by arguing that there is convincing evidence that climate changes now under way are primarily due to human activity in releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Buildings are particularly implicated in this process and so it is appropriate that the design and construction process should be a prime target in the war against catastrophic climate change. The book is designed to promote a creative partnership between the professions to produce buildings which achieve optimum conditions for their inhabitants whilst making minimum demands on fossil based energy.

Peter Smith has written extensively on the subject and is well known in the field. He is responsible for introducing the compulsory sustainable element of the course in the UK. He is Chairman of the RIBA Environment and Energy Committee, the RIBA Sustainable Features Committee and Vice Chairman of the Sustainable Development Committee.

chapter 1|10 pages

Climate Change – People or Nature?

chapter 2|8 pages

Predictions

chapter 5|16 pages

Low Energy Techniques for Housing

chapter 6|8 pages

Insulation

chapter 7|8 pages

Domestic Energy

chapter 8|16 pages

Advanced and Ultra-Low-Energy Houses

chapter 9|8 pages

Housing, an Unacceptable Legacy

chapter 11|22 pages

Ventilation

chapter 12|12 pages

Energy Options

chapter 13|8 pages

Lighting – Designing for Daylight

chapter 15|6 pages

Cautionary Notes

chapter 16|10 pages

Beacon Buildings

chapter 17|4 pages

an American Perspective

chapter 18|6 pages

Life Cycle Assessment and Recycling

chapter 19|4 pages

Integrated District Environmental Design

chapter 20|14 pages

Emergent Technologies and Future Prospects