Structural Design of Residential House Case Study PDF
Structural Design of Residential House Case Study PDF
Structural Design of Residential House Case Study PDF
Summary
The topic of sustainable constructions is very complex and includes a large number of
parameters of various branches of civil engineering covering all technical as well as non
technical sciences. Optimization of structural design of a building from the environmental
point of view represents a wide multicriterion problem.
Basic principles of sustainable building are defined in [1] but general methodology
of environmental assessment of building structures is at the moment not available. The
presented case study shows one possible approaches to environmental optimization and
assessment of structural design of a building. Several design alternatives of a residential
building have been proposed and assessed. The alternatives differ from each other in the
choice of building materials and building technology.
1 Introduction
For the environmental assessment a simple four storey residential building (Fig. 1) has
been drafted. The aim was to design as flexible layout as possible and optimal planning
module that enables to apply many structural and material alternatives. In each of the 2nd
to 4th floors there are 3 dwelling units two four-room flats (95,9 m2) and one one-room
flatlet (27,5 m2), in the 1st floor there are two four-room flats and in the middle section is
the entrance and the technical facility.
Following groups of criteria have been used for the environmental assessment: (i)
embodied energy, embodied CO2, embodied SO2, amount of used materials, (ii)
consumption of material resources (amount of renewable materials, recycled materials,
recyclable materials, primary natural sources), (iii) materials from demolition of the
building (fully recyclable materials, partially recyclable materials, non-recyclable
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materials, wastes). New developed tools for multicriterion analysis have been used for
environmental assessment.
The data of embodied energy and embodied emissions CO2,ekv., SO2,ekv. are taken
from the catalogues of building structures [4], [5] and [6]. Operation emissions CO2,ekv.,
SO2,ekv. (global and regional) and fuels conversion factors were calculated using the
GEMIS software with the Czech database [5].
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ENV 1996-1-1 Design of masonry structures. Part 1-1: General rules for buildings. Rules
for reinforced and unreinforced masonry, (ii) SN P ENV 1992-1-1 Design of concrete
structures. Part 1: General rules and rules for buildings, (iii) SN 731001 Foundation of
structures. Subsoil under shallow foundations, (iv) SN P ENV 1991-2-1 Basis of design
and actions on structures. Part 2-1: Action on structures. Densities, self weight and
imposed loads, (v) SN P ENV 1991-2-3 Basis of design and actions on structures. Part 2-
3: Actions on structures - Snow loads.
Fig. 2 Structural variants of the load bearing systems of the residential building.
The design of the floor structures is based on the relevant company design
fundamentals. The monolithic floor slabs are designed according to (ii) and reinforced
with upper and lower steel mesh. The roof load bearing structures are considered identical
to the floor structures. The girders are reinforced with bar steel and stirrups of R10505
steel. Balconies in all the variants are made of monolithic concrete slab with a thickness of
120 mm and connected by the ISO girder. The reinforcement of columns is preliminary
estimated to 3%, the footings have only structural reinforcement of 0,5%.
The footing structures are designed according to the 1st geotechnical category and
foundation bearing value of 0,2 N/mm2 specifically for each variant. The footing design
(footing area i.e. concrete and steel volume) is based on total weight of the building of each
particular variant.
The building envelope in each variant is considered with an external insulation from
mineral wool in timber grid with timber sheathing. All the building envelop structures are
designed to recommended U-values according to the SN 73 0540-2 Thermal Protection
of Buildings Part 2: requirements, i.e. UN = 0,25 W/m2K for the peripheral walls (incl.
variant with wood panels), UN = 0,16 W/m2K for the roof structures, and UN = 0,40
W/m2K for the floor structures adjacent to soil.
This wall bearing system is designed for a short span with the crosswise bearing walls
modular distance of 4,3 respectively 4,5 m. Material and technological variants were
planed as complex systems of walls and floors using ceramic and concrete.
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This structural variant consists of lengthwise and crosswise monolithic bearing walls with
a thickness of 150 mm and monolithic floor slabs with a thickness of 180 mm. The
peripheral walls and partition walls are designed as non-structural linings of different
material variants. The external monolithic walls are insulated with 200 mm of insulation.
The load bearing structure consists of monolithic RC columns 300/300 mm with girders
300/500 mm and a two-way floor slab 180 mm thick with the span of 8,75 x 6,6 m and
one-way floor slab with the span of 4,5 m. The internal columns are erected on footings
2500/2500 mm whereas the external columns are on footings 1600/1600 mm. The
peripheral walls and the partition walls between flats are erected on footing beams 300/600
mm. The peripheral walls and partition walls are different in each variant.
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proofing in the ground floor, (iv) water proofing in the ground floor, (v) roof covering
above the roof bearing structure incl. thermal insulation and roofing, (vi) plumbing (top
closure, window sheeting, ...), (vii) joinery (internal parapets), (viii) metalwork (railings
around staircases and balconies, shading elements, ...).
embodied CO2, eq. kg 229 236 234 816 221 895 214 464 235 971 193 299 181 862 230 496 154 079 83 781
embodied SO2, eq. kg 811 863 876 886 913 734 763 845 656 512
amount of used materials tons 1 461 1 520 1 498 1 768 1 407 1 238 1 687 1 097 919 254
renewable materials tons 9,76 12,49 13,42 456,37 12,45 11,99 787,10 10,73 25,85 81,40
recycled materials tons 2,92 6,34 7,62 7,62 6,29 5,69 7,06 3,96 21,78 8,22
non-renewable material sources tons 1 448 1 501 1 477 1 304 1 388 1 220 892 1 082 871 164
fully recyclable materials tons 20,92 22,64 46,21 489,17 43,83 35,41 810,74 33,84 57,28 78,58
partially recyclable materials tons 1 439 1 478 1 450 1 277 1 361 1 200 874 1 061 848 167
waste tons 1,69 1,69 1,98 1,98 1,98 2,09 2,09 2,09 13,73 6,75
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fabric
0
V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9
others
Fig. 3 Environmental parameters of structural variants.
1 500 1 500
1 000 1 000
500 500
0 0
V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9
6 Conclusions
Particular results of the case study illustrate among others how complicated interpretation
of environmental assessment is. There are several means of reading depending on priorities
or needs. One of the possible interpretation has been shown above but it is necessary to
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create global methodology and to set priorities to enable explicit assessment of building
structures from the environmental point of view.
This outcome has been achieved with the financial support of the Ministry of Education,
Youth and Sports, project No. 1M0579, within activities of the CIDEAS research centre.
References
[1] Agenda 21 for Sustainable Building, CIB Report Publication 237, Czech translation:
VUT v Praze, Praha, 2001, ISBN 80-01-02467-92.
[2] JPD3 environmental database of building structures, in the framework of the
project CZ.04.3.07/3.2.01.2/2208 Sustainable Building educational courses for
lifetime training.
[3] VONKA, M.: Life cycle assessment, thesis, Prague, 2006
[4] SIA Dokumentation D 0123: Hochbaukonstruktionen nach kologischen
Gesichtspunkten, Zrich 1995
[5] WALTJEN, T.: kologischer Bauteilkatalog. Bewertete gngige Konstruktionen,
Springer-Verlag/Wien 1999
[6] MTZL, H., ZELGER, T.: kologie der Dmmstoffe, Springer-Verlag/Wien 2000