Embodied Energy and Urban Infrastructure: Mitigating Impact of Climate Change
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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur(s): |
B. C. Roy
(FNAE, Hon. Member & Fellow, and Former Vice President, IABSE, F.I.Struct.E. {UK}, RUPL, CEO –
RUICPL, New Delhi, India)
S. Bhattacharyya (Principal Track Engineer, DB Engineering & Consulting GmbH, Bengaluru, India) |
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Médium: | papier de conférence | ||||
Langue(s): | anglais | ||||
Conférence: | IABSE Congress: Engineering for Sustainable Development, New Delhi, India, 20-22 September 2023 | ||||
Publié dans: | IABSE Congress New Delhi 2023 | ||||
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Page(s): | 1386-1394 | ||||
Nombre total de pages (du PDF): | 9 | ||||
DOI: | 10.2749/newdelhi.2023.1386 | ||||
Abstrait: |
Urban growth demands sustainable residential, commercial, heritage, and transit infrastructure. Urban planning requires local knowledge, data, horizon year selection, and land use flexibility. Urban designers prioritise architecture, local resources, public input, and affordability. From extraction and refinement to marketing and disposal, embodied energy is defined as the sum of energy inputs (fuels/power, materials, human resources, etc.). Better amenities use more energy, whereas sustainability lowers embodied energy. Green development would never get ‘Greener’, rather go less red. Brownfield development revitalises abandoned factories, military locations, transportation infrastructure, Go-Downs, etc. |
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Mots-clé: |
développement durable des friches industrielles
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