TY - JOUR
T1 - Design for Deconstruction and Disassembly
T2 - 9th CIRP Conference on Assembly Technology and Systems, CATS 2022
AU - Tleuken, Aidana
AU - Torgautov, Beibut
AU - Zhanabayev, Asset
AU - Turkyilmaz, Ali
AU - Mustafa, Mohammad
AU - Karaca, Ferhat
N1 - Funding Information:
415 The authors acknowledge the financial support from 416 Nazarbayev University Faculty Development Competitive 417 Research Grant Program (Funder Project Reference: 418 280720FD1904). Thee Norwegian Agency also supports this 419 work for Internationaall Cooperation and Quality Enhancementt 420 in Higher Education (Diku) under Project ref. CPEA-ST-421 2019/10029: Academic Cooperation in Post-graduatee 422 Engineering Education (ACE) between UiT Thee Arctic 423 University of Norway and Nazarbayev University, 424 Kazakhstan.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Construction waste management is becoming an emerging issue in light of the massive increase in construction activities in the developing economies as part of their rapid economic growth. The gradual tightening of building regulations towards energy consumption creates the need to decrease the building materials and components during construction, and one of the proposed ways to achieve it is to reuse. The building components can be initially designed for disassembly (DfD) to improve and optimize the process, thus proposing significant benefits to the circular economy in all three sustainability pillars (economic, social, and environmental). Nevertheless, current practices in developing countries of Central Asia show that lifecycle analysis of buildings' end-of-life influence is not a well-practiced activity. This paper investigates the barriers, opportunities, and current practices of deconstruction and disassembly in one of the fast-developing Central Asian countries based on the literature review and stakeholder opinions. Conducting relevant PESTEL analysis, this research also proposes practical strategies, methods, and recommendations for the construction industry to develop circular economy projects and improve disassembly and deconstruction analytics.
AB - Construction waste management is becoming an emerging issue in light of the massive increase in construction activities in the developing economies as part of their rapid economic growth. The gradual tightening of building regulations towards energy consumption creates the need to decrease the building materials and components during construction, and one of the proposed ways to achieve it is to reuse. The building components can be initially designed for disassembly (DfD) to improve and optimize the process, thus proposing significant benefits to the circular economy in all three sustainability pillars (economic, social, and environmental). Nevertheless, current practices in developing countries of Central Asia show that lifecycle analysis of buildings' end-of-life influence is not a well-practiced activity. This paper investigates the barriers, opportunities, and current practices of deconstruction and disassembly in one of the fast-developing Central Asian countries based on the literature review and stakeholder opinions. Conducting relevant PESTEL analysis, this research also proposes practical strategies, methods, and recommendations for the construction industry to develop circular economy projects and improve disassembly and deconstruction analytics.
KW - Buildings
KW - Circular Economy
KW - Construction
KW - Kazakhstan
KW - PESTEL
KW - Sustainability
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U2 - 10.1016/j.procir.2022.02.148
DO - 10.1016/j.procir.2022.02.148
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85127524199
SN - 2212-8271
VL - 106
SP - 15
EP - 20
JO - Procedia CIRP
JF - Procedia CIRP
Y2 - 6 April 2022 through 8 April 2022
ER -