Solutions to Climate Change Challenges in the Built Environment
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 351
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The multi-disciplinary perspective provided here offers a strategic view on built environment issues and improve understanding of how built environment activities potentially induce global warming and climate change. It also highlights solutions to these challenges.
Solutions to Climate change Challenges in the Built Environment helps develop an appreciation of the diverse themes of the climate change debate across the built environment continuum. A wide perspective is provided through contributions from physical, environmental, social, economic and political scientists. This strategic view on built environment issues will be useful to researchers as well as policy experts and construction practitioners wanting a holistic view.
This book clarifies complex issues around climate change and follows five main themes: climate change experiences; urban landscape development; urban management issues; measurement of impact; and the future. Chapters are written by eminent specialists from both academic and professional backgrounds. The main context for chapters is the developed world but the discussion is widened to incorporate regional issues.
The book will be valuable to researchers and students in all the built environment disciplines, as well as to practitioners involved with the design, construction and maintenance of buildings, and government organisations developing and implementing climate change policy.Content:
Chapter 1 Introductory Insights to Climate Change Challenges (pages 1β9): Felix N. Hammond, Colin A. Booth, Jessica E. Lamond and David G. Proverbs
Chapter 2 Climate Change: Nature and Emerging Trends (pages 11β22): Mark McCarthy
Chapter 3 Regional Implications (pages 23β32): Ana Lopez
Chapter 4 Urbanization and Climate Change (pages 33β43): Felix N. Hammond, Kwasi Baffour Awuah Gyau and Stanislaus Y. Adiaba
Chapter 5 Global Political Initiatives and Overtones (pages 45β55): Jean?Luc Salagnac
Chapter 6 Green Economics Dialogue and the Built Environment (pages 57β74): Miriam Kennet
Chapter 7 Strategic Environmental Impact Assessment (pages 75β86): Joseph Somevi
Chapter 8 Methods for Valuing Preferences for Environmental and Natural Resources: An Overview (pages 87β98): Jessica E. Lamond and Ian Bateman
Chapter 9 Ecological Value of Urban Environments (pages 99β112): Ian C. Trueman and Christopher H. Young
Chapter 10 The Pedological Value of Urban Landscapes (pages 113β126): Jim Webb, Michael A. Fullen and Winfried E. H. Blum
Chapter 11 Insights and Perceptions of Sustainable Design and Construction (pages 127β139): David W. Beddoes and Colin A. Booth
Chapter 12 Progress in Eco and Resilient Construction Materials Development (pages 141β151): Jamal M. Khatib
Chapter 13 Energy Efficiency: Alternative Routes to Mitigation (pages 153β161): David Coley
Chapter 14 The Benefits of Green Infrastructure in Towns and Cities (pages 163β179): Susanne M. Charlesworth and Colin A. Booth
Chapter 15 Particulate?Induced Soiling on Historic Limestone Buildings: Insights and the Effects of Climate Change (pages 181β191): David E. Searle
Chapter 16 Sustainable Transportation (pages 193β205): Panagiotis Georgakis and Christopher Nwagboso
Chapter 17 Linkages of Waste Management Strategies and Climate Change Issues (pages 207β221): Kim Tannahill and Colin A. Booth
Chapter 18 Climate Change and the Geotechnical Stability of βEngineeredβ Landfill Sites (pages 223β236): Robert W. Sarsby
Chapter 19 Water Resources Issues and Solutions for the Built Environment: Too Little Versus Too Much (pages 237β250): Susanne M. Charlesworth and Colin A. Booth
Chapter 20 Organisational Culture and Climate Change Driven Construction (pages 251β267): Nii A. Ankrah and Patrick A. Manu
Chapter 21 Preparing for Extreme Weather Events: A Risk Assessment Approach (pages 269β281): Keith Jones
Chapter 22 The Socio?Environmental Vulnerability Assessment Approach to Mapping Vulnerability to Climate (pages 283β301): Fiifi Amoako Johnson, Craig W. Hutton and Mike J. Clarke
Chapter 23 Mitigation via Renewables (pages 303β320): David Coley
Chapter 24 Complexities and Approaches to Managing the Adaptation of Climate Change by Coastal Communities (pages 321β335): Annie T. Worsley, Vanessa J. C. Holden, Jennifer A. Millington and Colin A. Booth
Chapter 25 Lessons for the Future (pages 337β342): Jessica E. Lamond, David G. Proverbs, Colin A. Booth and Felix N. Hammond
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
There is an urgent need to build human capacity to make the often vulnerable and exposed buildings and communities we live and work in more resilient to the changing social, economic and physical environments around us. Extensive research has been done over the last decades on both mitigation and ad
This book offers a selection of the best papers presented during the International conference on Mitigating and Adapting Built Environments for Climate Change in the Tropics, held at Tanri Abeng University (TAU), Jakarta, Indonesia, March 2015.<br />The book is divided into four main parts. The firs
<p>This book offers a selection of the best papers presented during the International conference on Mitigating and Adapting Built Environments for Climate Change in the Tropics, held at Tanri Abeng University (TAU), Jakarta, Indonesia, March 2015. <br>The book is divided into four main parts. The fi
<p><p>The latest scientific knowledge on climate change indicates that higher greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere through unchecked emissions will provoke severe climate change and ocean acidification. Both impacts can fundamentally alter environmental structures on which humanity relies