1.1. Background
Climate change and energy sustainability are among the five main targets the EC (European Commission) agreed to achieve by 2020. Three specific objectives define this target: to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 20%, to increase energy efficiency by 20%, and to obtain 20% of energy from renewables [
1]. Accordingly, the European Parliament (EP) elaborated the guidelines for greenhouse gas emission reduction to be followed by member states.
As buildings are responsible for a large share of the environmental impact, accounting for 40% of total energy consumption, they require specific attention from policy makers [
2]. The EP updated its energy directives relating to buildings in 2010, with the ambitious mandate of achieving zero or almost zero energy buildings by 2020 [
2]. Member states followed by updating their own national regulations.
Within the European Union (EU), the building industry is an important sector, with a gross operating rate of 10.7%. Spain is the country with the largest percentage of the building industry, with a share in 2010 of 22%, and thus requires very special attention [
3]. Even though the real estate bubble burst in Spain has slowed down the frantic construction activity of the 2000s, several expert studies report greater market confidence, which may encourage new residential construction in the near future [
4,
5]. The published statistics for new building permits indicate a regular rhythm of around 200,000 new units per year in the 1990s, with 1995 being the start of an increase that sharply rose after 1998 and reached its peak of nearly 740,000 units in 2006. The year 2012 marked the lowest point, with less than 60,000 units [
6]. After this point, several reports indicate a resurgence of activity. Nonetheless, new construction at a rate of even 60,000 units per year still merits serious consideration for its environmental impact. While housing before the bubble was designed with criteria from the late 1990s, whatever is built from now on must conform to at least the EU 2020 targets for emissions reduction and energy efficiency, which herald a very different world for building design and criteria. The question arises of what to do from the perspective of planning, design, and construction for genuine, sustainable results while maintaining the character of the local urban culture.
Spanish building regulations have been harmonized with the EC guidelines since 2006, and are contained in the CTE (
Código Técnico de la Edificación, Spanish Building Code) [
7]. Within this framework, energy efficiency is regulated by DB-HE (
Documento Básico de Ahorro de Energía, Basic Document for Energy Savings), first issued in 2006, and updated in 2013 to adapt to the new European Directive 2010/31/EU [
8]. Simple environmental assessment procedures were first established in the late 1970s, the main design decision criteria being envelope transmittance and building shape factor (
factor de forma in Spanish; the result of dividing area A of the envelope by volume V of the building, S
f = A/V) [
9] (p. 24540). As a side note,
shape factor is called compactness factor in the USA [
10], but in Europe compactness is often defined as the inverse of the shape factor, so larger numbers mean higher compactness [
11,
12] (pp. 26, 129). Although this simple assessment was in use and allowed until 2013 in Spain as part of a simplified analysis in housing and small buildings, it has been completely phased out in favor of detailed computer simulations to assess the envelope design and the building energy efficiency and carbon emissions. However, building shape factor is still a meaningful parameter when used in conjunction with other parameters such as orientation, shape complexity, and percentage of glazed surfaces, especially for early design decisions [
13,
14,
15].
Furthermore, renewable energies have become mandatory for a percentage of DHW (Domestic Hot Water) production, and in tertiary buildings providing the percentage of PV (Photo Voltaic) energy production on site is also mandatory [
16]. All these measures will surely improve the buildings’ performance.
However, there are no special guidelines or provisions regarding energy consumed and emissions produced in the construction process prior to building occupancy. A serious concern arises from this oversight, as the impact of this previous process is something that must be taken into consideration. It is true that research exists on methods for a more complete environmental assessment to fill this gap. LCA (Life Cycle Assessment) is one of them, and has developed greatly in the last 20 years, with many studies trying to develop and test comprehensive methodologies [
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22]. Although there is not yet a definite and universally accepted application methodology, some tools and studies following the guidelines in ISO 14040 [
23] are already available, although still in need of improvement.
Khasreen
et al. [
17] present a very complete overview of the LCA process for implementation with its achievements and problems over a 15-year period starting in 1994. They highlight the possibilities and the growing number of studies and methods, but still see a need to find a way to normalize and compare the findings of different LCA studies. Finkbeiner
at al. [
18] present an attempt at a comprehensive LCA sustainability assessment method, including not only environmental issues, but also economic and social issues as well, and consider the environmental aspect of LCA sustainability assessment to be already sufficiently developed compared to the other two aspects.
Zabalza
et al. [
19] present a simplified but comprehensive method for LCA environmental and economic assessment, with a detailed application to one Spanish case study, which can be useful in real-world design decision making. Gong and Song [
20] propose another LCA assessment methodology aimed mainly at carbon emissions, studying in a systematic way the different factors related to carbon emissions, applied to a specific case in China. Bragança
et al. [
21] tried to develop yet another method to elaborate a clearer and more standardized LCA method identifying and weighing a set of parameters for environmental performance of buildings. Ortiz
et al. [
22] reviewed the LCA methods development in the period 2000–2007, highlighting the interest of considering the full life cycle.
These studies are encouraging as they show the potential of practical LCA implementation, although they all agree on the need for further research to reach some form of reliable reference method that can be widely applied. There is a gap between the limited focus of normative guidelines and the urgent need to implement wider and more comprehensible assessment tools. Both the efforts of the EU and Spain can be largely limited if there is not a way to fill this gap. Furthermore, in the absence of legal obligation, these more comprehensive assessments are performed only on a voluntary basis in a very small fraction of the whole construction industry. That means less real experience, and fewer examples of practical application of these methodologies.
Research shows that, especially for the construction phase, case studies are essential to improve our knowledge base and understanding of the problem [
17,
19,
24,
25,
26,
27]. Khasreen
et al. [
17] compared 30 different case studies. Among them, 16 included the construction process impact. The results showed much heterogeneity, due not only to the different methodologies used in each case but to the wide number of circumstances that make each case unique. Ramesh
et al. [
24] reviewed 73 different cases across 13 countries, and concluded that the embodied energy of buildings accounted for between 10% and 20% of the total impact of buildings. Ma
et al. [
25] analyzed the environmental impact of an intelligent office tower in Tianjin, and estimated that construction process accounted for 32% of the total energy consumption in a lifespan of 50 years, although the percentage decreased with a longer lifespan. Zabalza
et al. [
19], in their case study of a low energy building in Spain, reported an energy consumption impact of 45.7% in the production and construction phase of a building, assuming a 50-year lifespan. In a different study, however, they found the building’s embodied energy accounts for over 30% of the total impact [
26].
Monahan and Powel [
27] found a great potential for carbon impact reduction in residential buildings through the choice of better materials and construction techniques. It is true that case studies are limited and specific, and cannot be extrapolated without compromising their validity. However, they can help validate and improve the tools and methodologies we have so far, and give us an idea of the range of variability of the problem.
An additional question is to what extent it is important to include the wider context of the building in its study and assessment. Buildings are in cities, and rely on the infrastructure of streets and services that have to be built, maintained, and operated. In other words, sustainable buildings are a part of the sustainable city, and addressing only buildings overlooks an important aspect of the problem. City planning and urban design introduce layers of complexity that make it very difficult to apply the same methods used for buildings, due to the number and variety of agents involved, and the much longer time span needed for any action or decision. However, it is possible to enlarge the boundary of the study to include the immediate urban context, or a small neighborhood. Existing building green rating systems are developing and improving quickly and becoming more accepted by the building industry, and most of them offer models that go beyond the building itself to include the assessment of whole neighborhoods and even city planning.
LEED (or Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design) [
28] offers a specialized Neighborhood assessment tool. BREEAM (Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Methodology) [
29] also has a similar tool called BREEAM Communities. CASBEE (Comprehensive Assessment System for Built Environment Efficiency) [
30]; in addition to developing an assessment method that includes buildings’ immediate context, it offers two specialized modules, Urban Development and Cities. All these tools, mentioned only as representative examples, attempt to be comprehensive and realistic; however, they differ greatly in their results. For example, Yoon and Park [
31] compared the above three certification systems, and although the results were meaningful, and all three systems tend be balanced and comprehensive, they found significant differences among them due to the great variation among different urban cultures. Even though city and urban green certification methods keep improving and expanding, their implementation in real projects is still very limited.
1.2. Objectives and Outline of the Paper
In this context, the present paper has as its main objective a contribution to the pool of building LCA assessment case studies, where the available tools and information are enough to obtain fairly realistic results. To overcome the difficulty of deciding among many and diverse methods that are not yet fully tested, or to avoid undergoing a strict and burdensome certification process, this study also tries to use tools already common and familiar in the professional world: namely, a basic application of the LCA guidelines, with a clear delimitation of the scope of the study, and the use of tools and processes already well tested and established. Notwithstanding the evident limitation derived from the local character and the simplifications necessary in this methodology, this can be balanced by the possibility of immediate application and implementation by any professional in a wide range of cases. Environmental problems do not wait, and the 2020 deadline is just four years away. In order to provide valuable findings, this work attempts to fill the abovementioned gap between regulations and existing assessment tools, not only comparing building alternatives, but also including the construction phase and the immediate urbanization infrastructure, applied to a very specific case study. At this stage, resulting energy consumption and carbon emissions impact are the two parameters assessed, as they align with the EU 2020 agenda. The economic study of cost is intended as an additional merit of this case study, as it is an additional aid for real-world decision making.
Specifically, this paper studies an actually constructed housing cluster, and consists mainly of a comparison of two different alternatives to ascertain their advantages and disadvantages, and to aid in future planning and design decisions. Although this has been conducted with care and rigor, rather than precise calculations of absolute results, a reliable comparison between alternatives has been its main aim.
The specific objectives are as follows:
To analyze energy consumption during the preparation and construction process, during the periods of production, infrastructure, and construction, plus the energy consumption resulting from usage.
To compare two commonly used urban typologies, single family terraced housing and low density multi-family housing, for their sustainability especially related to their energy impact and CO2 emissions.
To expand the sustainability study of both typologies over the first 10 years of use, which is the legal period for design and construction warrantee in Spain, and the period in which most renovations and improvements by owners begin.
To include efficiency comparison as a new decision criterion for urban design decision making, and provide necessary data for this.
To provide conclusions on sustainability criteria regarding typology planning, resource consumption in the urbanization process, land occupancy and providing free and green spaces, and construction and infrastructure cost comparisons.
After the present introduction of the normative framework and current knowledge review and the expression of the study objectives, the second section introduces the methodology of the study, explaining how the LCA assessment tools have been used in conjunction with the official software tools for energy efficiency; the third section describes the case study in detail; and the fourth section presents the results and discussion. Finally, the conclusions show the importance of this case study in particular, not only showing the usefulness of existing tools to go beyond the minimum legal requirements, but also highlighting unique findings that challenge intuitive deductions from existing knowledge, such as the occasional lack of relation between energy efficiency and emissions, or the great portion of energy consumed and emissions produced during construction.