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Let's build toward a circular economy

Sustainability

Let's build toward a circular economy

Buildings that offer flexibility allow future generations to reuse, restore, and adapt it for other uses.


By Eric Corey Freed | CannonDesign | May 11, 2023
Circular economy 3D graph
As our firm looks towards the future of architecture, weā€™re shooting for more impactful and transformational goals than sustainability. Photo courtesy CannonDesign

If someone asked you how your marriage was and you said ā€œsustainable,ā€ would you be proud of that answer? A sustainable relationship to a building, community and planet should be the floor, not the ceiling. A partnership that doesnā€™t just maintain itself, but instead improves, grows, and becomes more valuable over timeā€”these are the kinds of outcomes I seek to create every day. As an expert in the circular economy, Iā€™m here to push the industry towards regeneration.

What's a circular economy?

In the simplest sense, a circular economy is an approach to material lifecycle management guided by three principles: eliminate waste, keep materials in circulation for as long as possible, and regenerate natural systems. These principles are essential, given how construction is estimated to create a third of the worldā€™s waste. How these strategies appear in building design and construction is based on the outcomes our clients are looking for. Want a building that comes with a financial return? What about one that lasts longer than any of its peers? What about a building that everyone can feel good about constructing, from the community to the animals that surround it? These are all outcomes our strategies build towards.

At its core, a circular economy is an extension of our firm's Living-Centered Design ethos, where the spaces we create donā€™t just meet the needs of this generation and the next, but make it easier for future generations to meet their own needs. That means brighter and better communities, businesses, ecologies and lives. But I also think this should be every architectā€™s goalsā€”if itā€™s not, why are you in this line of work? We have the power to make a massive difference in peopleā€™s lives.

Circular economy versus linear model
In the simplest sense, a circular economy is an approach to material lifecycle management guided by three principles: eliminate waste, keep materials in circulation for as long as possible and regenerate natural systems. Photo courtesy CannonDesign


Redefining the role of the architect

Traditionally, architects have thought of their work in a vacuum, handing over the keys to a building once itā€™s complete and saying enjoy. That way of designing and thinking has to change. We have an obligation to continue to be invested in the success of a building throughout its lifecycle. One new service line I see the industry offering is material lifecycle and utilization plans, where our staff, or other organizations, can assess buildings to tell you what materials you have, their value, age, and create a potential next life for the material to be circulated into a neighboring building project. Iā€™m so excited for organizations to see the value that comes from a proper, streamlined deconstruction.

As part of our firmā€™s partnership with ModularDesign+, weā€™re doing our part to make deconstruction more realistic and financially viable. Through modular design, we can prefabricate entire and repetitive portions of a building offsite, from bathrooms to residential units, then ship them to the site for faster assembly. Doing so allows us to reduce wasted material and construction time, while creating a building whose components can easily be removed during deconstruction, or when the buildingā€™s purpose changes.

The better we design for deconstruction, the more valuable materials become due to their potential for reuse in future projects, and the larger return on investment organizations will receive.

modular design circular economy vector art
Through modular design, we can prefabricate entire and repetitive portions of a building offsite, from bathrooms to residential units, then ship them to the site for faster assembly. Photo courtesy CannonDesign


Unpacking the circular pieces

The most sustainable building is one thatā€™s already built, which is why a flexible and adaptable structural designā€”from day oneā€”is essential. If we correctly design an academic building, it could be transformed into a simulation lab in a generation, and student housing a generation after that. This simply isnā€™t possible for most buildings from the ā€˜60s and ā€˜70s that are coming to the end of their lives now, as they werenā€™t built to be flexible and adaptable. So the preparations we make today will allow buildings to naturally evolve and adapt to the next generationā€™s needs. At the room level, this involves focusing on flexible partitions, multiuse rooms in buildings, and higher floor-to-floor space so that updated building systems can be incorporated as space needs change. COVID showed us how valuable adaptability is, and many older buildings werenā€™t up to that challenge. We never want to see that lack of resilience again.

You can see how these techniques, when layered atop each other, dramatically reduce waste and keep materials in use and in circulation. When less intensive and longer-lasting buildings are constructed, that also means fewer trips to extract raw materials, and fewer construction projects. Iā€™m sure weā€™ve all walked by a construction site that has overstayed its welcome in terms of noise pollution, dustiness and disruptions. By reducing demand for raw material and the length of construction timelines, we can reduce our demand on natural systems, and allow them to regenerate themselves, whether theyā€™re on our doorstep or halfway across the world. Before you know it, youā€™ve used all three circular economy principles in their true essence, rather than slapping the unspecific and watered-down label of ā€œsustainableā€ on a project.

Building transformation vector art
If we correctly design an academic building, it could be transformed into a simulation lab in a generation, and student housing a generation after that. Photo courtesy CannonDesign


Measuring impact

Because the values of well-designed, regenerative buildings are counted in decades, I havenā€™t had the chance to see even a tenth of my work pay offā€”that will only happen when both I and my buildings are retired and move onto the next stage of our lives.

Of course, there are quicker ROIs than a lifetime. The return on investments for working in the circular economy look different depending on who Iā€™m talking to, but thereā€™s fantastic benefits in the social, environmental and ecological sides. Say Iā€™m installing a solar array on a college campus, for example. I can discuss the social good of lowered air pollution from not burning fossil fuels, the innate ecological good of solar, or using a Power Purchase Agreement to help with installation costs and lower energy prices. A lot of experts talk about two branches of these returns, but thereā€™s always at least three, and theyā€™re more intertwined than you think.

The best way I picture return on investments is thinking of an entire building as a retirement fund. Many organizations see new buildings as an overhead cost, but theyā€™re more than thatā€”theyā€™re places to be invested in and withdrawn from, whether thatā€™s through the materials used to construct them or the use of the space itself. Any good accountant will tell you to always put your money into funds that have a consistent return on investment, but pretty much every building I've ever seen has a negative return. We can change that by redesigning the fund weā€™re investing inā€”material lifecycles, in this case. We need to stop throwing money into buildings and taking the loss.

Return on investment solar panels vector art
"Say Iā€™m installing a solar array on a college campus, for example. I can discuss the social good of lowered air pollution from not burning fossil fuels, the innate ecological good of solar, or using a Power Purchase Agreement to help with installation costs and lower energy prices." Photo courtesy CannonDesign

It's about time we create a new fund that actually gives you a return on your investment. Alternatives are out there, and weā€™re designing them today. New, imaginative, well-executed buildings make a better world possible and exciting, whether you're designing for people, planet, or profit, the opportunity is here.

About the author: Eric Corey FreedĀ is CannonDesign's director of sustainability.

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