Circular and Flexible Infill Concepts: Integration of the Residential User Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Flexible building is a building (noun) or building activity (verb) designed to allow easy rearrangement of infill components, whilst accommodating the potentially changing needs of occupants.
- Circular building (verb) is the dynamic total of associated processes, materials and stakeholders that accommodate circular flows of building materials and products at optimal rates and utilities. A circular building (noun) is the manifestation of this in a temporary configuration.
2. Methods
Delineation
3. Literature Study
3.1. Housing Quality and the Time-Factor
- Requirements of housing quality differ per person or target group as well as per time-period; the existing stock will always ask for adaptations,
- Housing inflexibility is still the norm; the large majority of multi-family housing is designed with no or one single—type of—occupant/occupancy in mind,
- Paradigm shifts, rooted in a desire for more flexibility, have been hinted at more than once in the last decades.
3.2. Residential Building Performance Evaluation
3.3. Open Building as a Driver for Circular Material Flows
3.4. Properties of Circularity
4. Results from Case-Study and Expert Consultations
4.1. Lessons from Three Cases
4.1.1. Molenvliet, Papendrecht, The Netherlands
- (1)
- The unique life experience of each of the users had to be valued, necessitating an unprejudiced design flow, without personal preferences of the architect,
- (2)
- Hobbies of the users were as important as basic activities.
- (3)
- From the renovations that were carried out by eight of fifteen households, six concerned modifications in the partitioning configuration.
4.1.2. The Kodan Experimental-housing Project (KEP) and Century Housing System (CHS), Tokyo, Japan
- (1)
- In Japan, a main driver for moving to open, flexible buildings derives from an imminent labor shortage in the construction sector, making it more important to design and construct buildings which require less skilled labor, for example residents and users themselves.
- (2)
- Respectively 51% (unit design Type A) and 59% (unit design Type B) of the surveyed residents with a KEP movable partitioning system changed the layout at least once (in 15–30 years), due to changes in lifestyle or family composition. Whereas this was 8% of the surveyed residents of a unit design Type C (non-movable partitioning).
- (3)
- Out of a set of twenty characteristics that could influence a resident’s decision to inhabit a particular housing unit of the CHS project, “easy to change layout” was chosen by 23% of the surveyed residents.
- (4)
- The CHS system was perceived as too complex, which made residents shy away from exploring the potential in many cases. This led to a simplification that has been recognized by almost all in the Japanese industry, namely a simple division in a base-building domain and an infill domain.
4.1.3. Bostadsrättsförening (BRF), Stockholm and Göteborg, Sweden
- (1)
- Residents are dissatisfied with, among others, a lack of storage facilities and work space, a lack of soundproofing between different rooms, the layout of the kitchen and bathroom, poor quality of materials, unused surface, and narrow and dark hallways
- (2)
- Many renovations were (also) due to the fact that “the apartment has material and performance of low technical and aesthetic quality, and is therefore replaced earlier than normal maintenance” ([61], page 42).
- (3)
- Overall, over 30% of the respondents in this study made changes to the floor plan layout.
- (4)
- The findings did not indicate that the motivation to achieve a higher sales value was a direct motive for action. Instead, “increased value appears as a supporting argument to increase the standard or personalize” ([61], page 26).
4.2. Expert Consultations
4.2.1. Open Building Design
4.2.2. National Renovation Platform
4.2.3. Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions
5. Derivation of Circ-Flex Criteria
- (1)
- Flexibility—the extent to which a partition wall, or a part of it, can easily and safely be disassembled, reassembled, repurposed, or disposed of. Specific attention goes to dimensions and—especially—connections, i.e., how elements are fixed,
- (2)
- Circularity—the extent to which walls and wall elements can easily, safely and purely follow high-grade renewability cycles, such as maintenance, redistribution, remanufacturing and recycling, and bio-cascades for biological materials. The main focus is on technical and design anticipation of such cycles i.e., the capacities of stakeholders in the supply chain are left out of the equation, and
- (3)
- User benefits—concerning the mental and behavioral engagement and response that precedes or follows activities by the user. It was found that this user response always has an element of subjectivity, implying that aspects may come to the forefront that overrule solutions chosen by designers and engineers. Multiple drivers can be decisive forces in this respect, leading to purchasing behavior that is either in favor of or at the expense of Circ-Flex. For this exercise, two criteria were highlighted in the expert consultations: willingness to engage or invest (in time and money) and freedom of choice, concerning a range of options for materialization, either through DIY or outsourced.
Comparative Quick Scan of Two Variants
- Variant I, the reference, is a common timber frame wall with plasterboard panels and mineral wool insulation material. Wires, pipes and insulation can sit within the cavity between the drywall sheets, which cover both sides of the frame. In a finalization step, the wall is plastered. Although such a wall is, in theory, relatively easy to dismantle, it is usually not placed in anticipation of future reuse elsewhere. Nor is it designed, built, and used in a way that tolerates easy replacement without damaging other parts of the housing unit, such as piping, wiring, ceiling, floor, or other walls. This variant is comprised of: a timber frame (European pinewood); fixed with metal connections and screws onto floor and ceiling; glass wool insulation; plasterboard drywall; wooden plinths. Pre-treatment and finishing usually done with traditional products.
- Variant 2 is a partitioning wall built up out of products that are fully designed for circular material and product flow purposes, anticipating existing, proven constructing techniques (not much different from variant 1). It comprises of existing elements, as listed in so called Material Passports, such as developed within the Buildings as Material Banks project (BAMB) for example, and/or C2C® certified products registry [73,74]. This way the wall comes as close to a circular wall scheme as possible, knowing that not only the flexibility is anticipated, but also the circularity potential, relating material health and data embeddedness, which in turn accommodates supply and demand cycles at the most optimal rate and utility. The wall scheme comprises a timber frame (European pinewood); fixed with metal connections and screws in framework; using a mounting profile against ceiling and floor; organic fibre insulation; organic board for panelling and plinths. Pre-treatment and finishing done with e.g., pure loam- or lime-based products.
6. Discussion
6.1. Reflection on Methodology
6.2. Institutional, Legal, Cultural, and Demographic Context
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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SUPPORT | Characteristics | INFILL | |
Long lifespan | Short lifespan | ||
Fixed | Variable | ||
Architecturally strong | Demountable | ||
Scope | |||
Main structure | Partitioning walls | ||
Collective spaces | Kitchen, bathroom | ||
Mechanical, Electric, and Plumbing services | |||
Possibly façade elements | |||
Decision Sphere | |||
Investor | User | ||
Circularity Relation | |||
Retained or increased value | Adapts to change | ||
Long lifespan | Less waste | ||
Facilitates circular reuse |
CIRC-FLEX CRITERIA | |
---|---|
Unlocking Flexibility Capacity | Ease of Disassembly |
Ease of Re-assembly | |
Ease of Repurposing or Disposing | |
Unlocking User Capacity | User willingness to invest in time and money |
User perceived freedom of choice | |
Unlocking Circularity Capacity | Ease of Maintenance |
Ease of Redistribution | |
Ease of Remanufacturing | |
Ease of Recycling | |
Ease of facilitating Bio-cascades | |
Ease of facilitating Bio-feedstock |
Variant I Traditional Partitioning Wall | Variant II Circ-Flex Partitioning Wall | |
---|---|---|
Unlocking Flexibility Capacity | ||
Ease of disassembly (Easy, Moderate, Hard/Strong) | Easy–Moderate. Moderate–Strong impact on direct physical context | Easy. Moderate impact on direct physical context |
Ease of re-assembly (Easy, Moderate, Hard/Strong) | Easy-Moderate. Even if dimensions remain the same, constructive adjustments are required | Easy, if dimensions remain the same. Easy–Moderate if material adjustments are required |
Ease of repurposing or disposing (Easy, Moderate, Hard/Strong) | Easy, if traditional (linear) routes are sustained. Moderate–Hard if ‘regenerative’ trajectories are sought. | Easy–Moderate. Depending on status of (reverse) supply chain. Easy from the perspective of material purity |
Unlocking User Capacity | ||
User investment (Time and Expenses) | Time-commitment low with regard to all stages. Initial financial investment relatively low. Expected return on investment low or negative (i.e., discarding costs rather than residual value). | Time-commitment low with regard to (dis-)assembly stages. Initial financial investment low–moderate (purchasing costs often higher). Expected return on investment low–moderate. New financial models may emerge. |
Freedom of choice (Availability and Variation) | Abundant and readily available materials and products in a diverse range. | Partly abundant and readily available materials and products, partly limited to a few eligible products. The latter products are, in most cases, not readily available via common channels (such as DIY shops). |
Unlocking Circularity Capacity | ||
Maintenance | Surface layer accessible for maintenance. Other parts dependent on wall-finishing | Surface layer accessible for maintenance. Other parts dependent on wall-finishing |
Redistribution | timber, metal, plasterboard, insulation | timber, metal parts, board, mounting profile, insulation |
Remanufacturing | metal, possibly timber | metal, mounting profile, possibly timber |
Recycling (equal or higher grades) | metal, insulation | timber, board, insulation |
Down-cycling (lower grades) | timber, plasterboard, insulation | - |
Incineration or Landfill | timber, plasterboard, insulation | - |
Bio-cascades | (uncontaminated) timber | timber, insulation, board |
Bio-feedstock (e.g., soil improver) | - | Insulation |
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Geldermans, B.; Tenpierik, M.; Luscuere, P. Circular and Flexible Infill Concepts: Integration of the Residential User Perspective. Sustainability 2019, 11, 261. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11010261
Geldermans B, Tenpierik M, Luscuere P. Circular and Flexible Infill Concepts: Integration of the Residential User Perspective. Sustainability. 2019; 11(1):261. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11010261
Chicago/Turabian StyleGeldermans, Bob, Martin Tenpierik, and Peter Luscuere. 2019. "Circular and Flexible Infill Concepts: Integration of the Residential User Perspective" Sustainability 11, no. 1: 261. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11010261
APA StyleGeldermans, B., Tenpierik, M., & Luscuere, P. (2019). Circular and Flexible Infill Concepts: Integration of the Residential User Perspective. Sustainability, 11(1), 261. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11010261