Unveiling the Process of Sustainable Renovation
Journal article, 2012
Renovation processes are complex and there is a risk of underestimating
architectural, cultural, and social values in favor of exterior and interior upgrading, energy
efficiency and financing. A synthesized, systematic process is needed for making decisions
about renovation measures. The aim of this paper is to survey decision-making procedures
aimed for sustainable renovation. We inventory existing tools and methodologies based
on (a) a literature review and (b) results from a workshop with participants from the Swedish
buildings sector, academia, and other stakeholders. Our results show that there are many
tools available but few seem to have reached acceptance in renovation. None of the more
established methods and tools addresses a complexity that balances material and immaterial
values and they are often too specific. There is a need for simplified tools, especially for
evaluating more intangible, experienced values. Instead of one comprehensive tool
preferably a methodology for renovation should be developed with references to different
tools. In the building sector, renovation should be considered a service-minded process rather
than a merely technical one as often is the case in new construction. There is a need to clarify
the process and the meaning of the terms, and that need is even more urgent when it comes
to the values that are more difficult to define.
decision-making support
building assessment
sustainable renovation
tools and methodologies