Multidisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Collaboration in Nature-Based Design of Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Literature Review
3.1. Differences between Multidisciplinary, Interdisciplinary, and Transdisciplinary Research
3.2. Challenges of Multidisciplinary Design
3.3. Multidisciplinarity in Education and Research in Building Design
3.3.1. Generalized Views and Conclusions
3.4. Multidisciplinary Approaches and Collaborative Practices for Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism
3.4.1. Building Design and Improvement
3.4.2. Building Materials
3.4.3. Vegetation on and in Buildings
3.4.4. Planning of Settlements
3.4.5. Infrastructures
3.4.6. Collaboration Management
3.4.7. Collaboration Tools
4. Case Study
4.1. Introduction
4.2. Survey Findings
4.3. NBD Applications in Other Disciplines Informing SBD
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Summary of Responses by Academics from FoE and FoS, University of Strathclyde
Appendix A.1. Inspiration
Appendix A.2. Design
Appendix A.3. Materials
Appendix A.4. Reuse
Appendix A.5. Carbon Dioxide Reduction
Appendix A.6. Research Methods
Appendix A.7. Ecological Living
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Literature Review Themes | Knowledge Gaps |
---|---|
1. Differences between multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary research | How can universities proceed from multidisciplinarity to interdisciplinarity and then to transdisciplinarity? |
2. Challenges of multidisciplinary design | What are the connections between multidisciplinary design and TDR? |
3. Multidisciplinarity in education and research in building design | How can knowledge from multidisciplinary project teams be retrieved and disseminated to ensure the right level of detail and type of knowledge is gathered during the design process? |
4. Multidisciplinary approaches and collaborative practices for sustainable architecture and urbanism | How can MDC aided by co-design, participatory design processes, collaboration management, and related tools contribute to support SBD of various building types complementing the SBE? |
Theme | No. | Topic | Academic |
---|---|---|---|
1. Inspiration | 1.1 | Biophilia | 1 |
1.2 | Biological approaches | 61, 62, 63, 72, 73 | |
1.3 | Biomimetics | 56, 57 | |
1.4 | Bio-inspired movements | 31 | |
1.5 | Bio-inspired systems | 5, 6 | |
2. Modeling and management | 2.1 | Ecosystem modeling | 65 |
2.2 | Water management | 16, 25 | |
2.3 | Pollution | 38 | |
3. Manufacture | 3.1 | Bio-processibility | 8 |
3.2 | Bio-fabrication | 3 | |
3.3 | Biomanufacturing | 74, 75 | |
4. Design | 4.1 | Design optimization | 58, 59, 60, 71 |
4.2 | Intelligent design | 24 | |
4.3 | Functional surfaces | 9, 10 | |
5. Materials | 5.1 | Plant-based materials | 4, 70 |
5.2 | Sustainable materials | 14, 15, 30 | |
5.3 | Nanomaterials | 7, 11, 53, 54 | |
6. Reuse | 6.1 | Circular economy | 2, 33, 34, 44, 50, 5 |
6.2 | End-of-life strategy | 32 | |
7. CO2 reduction | 7.1 | Energy management | 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 52, 55 |
7.2 | Low-carbon technologies | 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 64 | |
8. Research methods | 8.1 | Multidisciplinary research | 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 |
8.2 | Interdisciplinary research | 66, 67, 68, 69 | |
9. Ecological living | 9.1 | Smart planning strategies | 28, 29 |
9.2 | Future cities | 35, 36, 37 | |
9.3 | Rural development | 26, 27 |
No. | Themes | Positive Responses | Faculty |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Inspiration | A6, A72 | Engineering, Science |
2. | Design | A10 | Science |
3. | Materials | A11, A54, A70 | Engineering, Science, Science |
4. | Reuse | A2 | Engineering |
5. | CO2 reduction | A42, A45 | Business, Engineering |
6. | Research methods | A12, A13 | Engineering, Engineering |
7. | Ecological living | A27, A35 | Humanities, Engineering |
Total | 13 |
Survey Findings | Reasons for Consideration |
---|---|
1. Benefits of NBD | 1.1. To move away from fossil fuels 1.2. Carbon dioxide reduction 1.3. Biodegradable or compostable materials 1.4. Reusing waste within the circular economy 1.5. To respond to complex, highly interdependent urban systems |
2. Scale of applications of NBD approaches | 2.1. Urban systems 2.2. Rural areas 2.3. Infrastructure: accessibility and affordability of energy from renewable sources; smart systems in public transport; waste recycling; vertical farming; minimizing environmental impacts; improving the quality of life of citizens. 2.4. Building elements: structural integrity; building insulation 2.5. Building materials: surface coatings to improve building performance; self-cleaning materials; reinforcing materials; building complex structures; developing nanostructures |
3. Challenges of applying NBD in the built environment | 3.1. Engagement of stakeholders and researchers 3.1.1. Lack of engagement with beneficiaries 3.1.2. Low awareness, planning restrictions, and legal and financial barriers 3.1.3. Establishing a co-development environment comprising relevant experts, existing service providers, and citizens to develop a solution and build a “sense of ownership” 3.2. Lack of knowledge 3.2.1. Knowledge of working mechanisms in the biological world 3.2.2. Lack of understanding of nature’s multiparameter space, its mechanisms, and the interrelation of its counterparts 3.2.3. Complexity 3.3. Practical concerns 3.3.1. Focus on functionality and financial costs 3.3.2. High energy lab and material costs, and wasteful solvent disposal 3.3.3. The need for and cost of testing the performance of reused building elements and materials 3.3.4. Finding professionals who are specialists in NBD 3.4. Research challenges 3.4.1. Ability to control molecules at the nanoscale and extrapolate that to an architectural level 3.4.2. Ability to convert materials back to raw materials 3.4.3. Uncertainty whether a sustainable material will have enhanced functionality; nanocomposite materials could be environmentally friendly but might not be completely sustainable as scientists aim for functionality that could conflict with sustainability 3.4.4. Using a natural or sustainable material does not ensure carbon emissions reduction as processing these materials can be more energy-intensive and emits more carbon unless there is a sustainable energy source 3.4.5. Creating high-integrity modeling and monitoring tools requiring the development and validation of detailed algorithms for different aspects such as heat transfer, fluid flow, weather, and human behavior 3.4.6. Extensive and complicated range of scale among the disciplines of chemistry, biology, and engineering for MDR as chemists use nanometers, biologists use micrometers, and engineers use millimeters and centimeters 3.4.7. Professionals never fully understand each other, e.g., a chemist would understand finite element analysis but not its engineering aspects 3.5. Educational challenges 3.5.1. Departments are reluctant to implement MDC due to issues such as credit weighting, staff workload allocation, stakeholder management, difficult coordination, disagreement on ownership, and unbalanced sharing of responsibility |
4. Overcoming the barriers to the development and application of NBD approaches in the built environment | 4.1. Policies and strategies 4.1.1. There needs to be both ecological and social commitment to reduce carbon emissions and reduce inequality 4.1.2. Circular economy encourages reusing natural resources as it mimics natural processes that do not produce waste 4.1.3. Consider local communities when identifying available natural resources to achieve an optimum solution 4.1.4. Policies are important to support the design of sustainable architecture, e.g., subsidies to young families living in rural areas in exchange for complying with criteria for sustainable building design 4.1.5. Bio-based strategies improve rural lifestyle as they encourage using local resources 4.1.6. Self-building invites NBD approach in residential areas 4.2. Education 4.2.1. Need for formal education in biology and zoology 4.2.2. Biologists need to comprehensively enhance existing biological knowledge so architects, chemists, physicists, and engineers can use it 4.2.3. Multidisciplinary education of architects can contribute to the design of sustainable architecture 4.2.4. Correlation between NBD and carbon emission reduction needs to be taught, using multidisciplinary education 4.3. Research strategies 4.3.1. Comprehensively examine building materials to achieve their whole lifecycle sustainability 4.3.2. Energy demands of manufacturing natural polymers should be lower than fossil-fuel-based plastic production 4.3.3. Sustainably sourced nanocomposite materials 4.3.4. Effective design decisions need timely information 4.3.5. Modeling/monitoring tools need to be integrous to exhibit reality and developed by using theories and methods that are good representations of thermo-fluid mechanisms governing all natural systems. |
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Butt, A.N.; Dimitrijević, B. Multidisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Collaboration in Nature-Based Design of Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism. Sustainability 2022, 14, 10339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141610339
Butt AN, Dimitrijević B. Multidisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Collaboration in Nature-Based Design of Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism. Sustainability. 2022; 14(16):10339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141610339
Chicago/Turabian StyleButt, Anosh Nadeem, and Branka Dimitrijević. 2022. "Multidisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Collaboration in Nature-Based Design of Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism" Sustainability 14, no. 16: 10339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141610339
APA StyleButt, A. N., & Dimitrijević, B. (2022). Multidisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Collaboration in Nature-Based Design of Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism. Sustainability, 14(16), 10339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141610339