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Building

A building or edifice is an enclosed structure with a roof and walls, usually standing permanently in one place,[1] such as a house or factory.[1] Buildings come in a variety of sizes, shapes, and functions, and have been adapted throughout history for numerous factors, from building materials available, to weather conditions, land prices, ground conditions, specific uses, prestige, and aesthetic reasons. To better understand the concept, see Nonbuilding structure for contrast.

Buildings serve several societal needs – occupancy, primarily as shelter from weather, security, living space, privacy, to store belongings, and to comfortably live and work. A building as a shelter represents a physical separation of the human habitat (a place of comfort and safety) from the outside (a place that may be harsh and harmful at times).

Ever since the first cave paintings, buildings have been objects or canvasses of much artistic expression. In recent years, interest in sustainable planning and building practices has become an intentional part of the design process of many new buildings and other structures, usually green buildings.

Definition edit

 
Skyscrapers under construction in Kalasatama, Helsinki, Finland (2021)

A building is 'a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place';[1] "there was a three-storey building on the corner"; "it was an imposing edifice". In the broadest interpretation a fence or wall is a building.[2] However, the word structure is used more broadly than building, to include natural and human-made formations[3] and ones that do not have walls; structure is more often used for a fence. Sturgis' Dictionary included that "[building] differs from architecture in excluding all idea of artistic treatment; and it differs from construction in the idea of excluding scientific or highly skilful treatment."[4]

Structural height in technical usage is the height to the highest architectural detail on the building from street level. Spires and masts may or may not be included in this height, depending on how they are classified. Spires and masts used as antennas are not generally included. The distinction between a low-rise and high-rise building is a matter of debate, but generally three stories or less is considered low-rise.[5]

History edit

There is clear evidence of homebuilding from around 18,000 BC.[6] Buildings became common during the Neolithic period.[7]

Types edit

 
A timber-framed house in Marburg, Germany
 
Belle Époque city-house on Strada Arthur Verona in Bucharest, Romania, currently part of a bookshop
 
The Mitilineu House, a city-house in Bucharest, dating from 1898

Residential edit

Single-family residential buildings are most often called houses or homes. Multi-family residential buildings containing more than one dwelling unit are called duplexes or apartment buildings. Condominiums are apartments that occupants own rather than rent. Houses may be built in pairs (semi-detached) or in terraces, where all but two of the houses have others on either side. Apartments may be built round courtyards or as rectangular blocks surrounded by plots of ground. Houses built as single dwellings may later be divided into apartments or bedsitters, or converted to other uses (e.g., offices or shops). Hotels, especially of the extended-stay variety (apartels), can be classed as residential.

Building types may range from huts to multimillion-dollar high-rise apartment blocks able to house thousands of people. Increasing settlement density in buildings (and smaller distances between buildings) is usually a response to high ground prices resulting from the desire of many people to live close to their places of employment or similar attractors.

Terms for residential buildings reflect such characteristics as function (e.g., holiday cottage (vacation home) or timeshare if occupied seasonally); size (cottage or great house); value (shack or mansion); manner of construction (log home or mobile home); architectural style (castle or Victorian); and proximity to geographical features (earth shelter, stilt house, houseboat, or floating home). For residents in need of special care, or those society considers dangerous enough to deprive of liberty, there are institutions (nursing homes, orphanages, psychiatric hospitals, and prisons) and group housing (barracks and dormitories).

Historically, many people lived in communal buildings called longhouses, smaller dwellings called pit-houses, and houses combined with barns, sometimes called housebarns.

Common building materials include brick, concrete, stone, and combinations thereof. Buildings are defined to be substantial, permanent structures. Such forms as yurts and motorhomes are therefore considered dwellings but not buildings.

Commercial edit

A commercial building is one in which at least one business is based and people do not live. Examples include stores, restaurant, and hotels.[citation needed]

Industrial edit

Industrial buildings are those in which heavy industry is done, such as manufacturing. These edifices include warehouses and factories.[citation needed]

Agricultural edit

Agricultural buildings are the outbuildings, such as barns located on farms.[citation needed]

Mixed use edit

Some buildings incorporate several or multiple different uses, most commonly commercial and residential.[citation needed]

Complex edit

 
Aluminum panel framed steel building in Korea

Sometimes a group of inter-related (and possibly inter-connected) builds are referred to as a complex – for example a housing complex,[8] educational complex,[9] hospital complex, etc.

Creation edit

The practice of designing, constructing, and operating buildings is most usually a collective effort of different groups of professionals and trades. Depending on the size, complexity, and purpose of a particular building project, the project team may include:

Regardless of their size or intended use, all buildings in the US must comply with zoning ordinances, building codes and other regulations such as fire codes, life safety codes and related standards.

Vehicles—such as trailers, caravans, ships and passenger aircraft—are treated as "buildings" for life safety purposes.

Ownership and funding edit

Environmental impacts edit

Buildings represent a large part of energy, electricity, water and materials consumption. As of 2020, they account for 37% of global energy use and energy-related CO2 emissions, which the United Nations estimate contributed to 33% of overall worldwide emissions.[10][11] Including the manufacturing of building materials, the global CO2 emissions were 39%.[12] If new technologies in construction are not adopted during this time of rapid growth, emissions could double by 2050, according to the United Nations Environment Program.

Glass buildings, especially all-glass skyscrapers, contribute significantly to climate change due to their energy inefficiency. While these structures are visually appealing and allow abundant natural light, they also trap heat, necessitating increased use of air conditioning systems, which contribute to higher carbon emissions. Experts advocate for design modifications and potential restrictions on all-glass edifices to mitigate their detrimental environmental impact.[13][14]

Buildings account for a large amount of land. According to the National Resources Inventory, approximately 107 million acres (430,000 km2) of land in the United States are developed. The International Energy Agency released a publication that estimated that existing buildings are responsible for more than 40% of the world's total primary energy consumption and for 24% of global carbon dioxide emissions.[15][16]

According to Global status report from the year 2016, buildings consume more than 30% of all produced energy. The report states that "Under a below 2°C trajectory, effective action to improve building energy efficiency could limit building final energy demand to just above current levels, meaning that the average energy intensity of the global building stock would decrease by more than 80% by 2050".[17]
 
Hanging gardens of One Central Park, Sydney
Green building practices aim to reduce the environmental impact of building as the building sector has the greatest potential to deliver significant cuts in emissions at little or no cost. General guidelines can be summarized as follows: Every building should be as small as possible. Avoid contributing to sprawl, even if the most energy-efficient, environmentally sound methods are used in design and construction. Bioclimatic design principles are able to reduce energy expenditure and by extension, carbon emissions. Bioclimatic design is a method of building design that takes local climate into account to create comfortable conditions within the structure.[18][19] This could be as simple as constructing a different shape for the building envelope or facing the building towards the south to maximize solar exposure for energy or lighting purposes. Given the limitations of city planned construction, bioclimatic principles may be employed on a lesser scale, however it is still an effective passive method to reduce environmental impact.

Building services edit

Physical plant edit

 
The BB&T Building in Macon, Georgia is constructed of aluminum.

Any building requires a certain general amount of internal infrastructure to function, which includes such elements like heating / cooling, power and telecommunications, water and wastewater etc. Especially in commercial buildings (such as offices or factories), these can be extremely intricate systems taking up large amounts of space (sometimes located in separate areas or double floors / false ceilings) and constitute a big part of the regular maintenance required.

Conveying systems edit

Systems for transport of people within buildings:

  • Elevator
     
    An under construction building in Pune, India. It is a high rise building, located in the South-Eastern Part of the city. In an area commonly known as 'Nine Hills'.
  • Escalator
  • Moving sidewalk (horizontal and inclined)

Systems for transport of people between interconnected buildings:

Building damage edit

 
A building in Massueville (Quebec, Canada) engulfed by fire

Buildings may be damaged during construction or during maintenance. They may be damaged by accidents[20] involving storms, explosions, subsidence caused by mining, water withdrawal[21] or poor foundations and landslides.[22] Buildings may suffer fire damage[23] and flooding. They may become dilapidated through lack of proper maintenance, or alteration work improperly carried out.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Max J. Egenhofer (2002). Geographic Information Science: Second International Conference, GIScience 2002, Boulder, CO, USA, September 25–28, 2002. Proceedings. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 110. ISBN 978-3-540-44253-0.
  2. ^ Building def. 2. Whitney, William Dwight, and Benjamin E. Smith. The Century dictionary and cyclopedia. vol. 1. New York: Century Co., 1901. 712. Print.
  3. ^ Structure. def. 2. Merriam-Webster's dictionary of synonyms: a dictionary of discriminated synonyms with antonyms and analogous and contrasted words.. Springfield, Mass: Merriam-Webster, 1984. 787. Print.
  4. ^ Building. def 1. Sturgis, Russell. A dictionary of architecture and building: biographical, historical, and descriptive. vol. 1. New York: The Macmillan Co.; 1901. 2236. Print.
  5. ^ Paul Francis Wendt and Alan Robert Cerf (1979), Real estate investment analysis and taxation, McGraw-Hill, p. 210
  6. ^ Rob Dunn (Aug 23, 2014). "Meet the lodgers: Wildlife in the great indoors". New Scientist: 34–37. from the original on 2014-11-29.
  7. ^ Pace, Anthony (2004). "Tarxien". In Daniel Cilia (ed.). Malta before History – The World's Oldest Free Standing Stone Architecture. Miranda Publishers. ISBN 978-9990985085.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-01-10. Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  9. ^ "isye building complex". from the original on 2017-01-03.
  10. ^ "2020 Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction: Towards a Zero-emissions, Efficient and Resilient Buildings and Construction Sector - Executive Summary". 2020.
  11. ^ Nord, Natasa (2017), "Building Energy Efficiency in Cold Climates", Encyclopedia of Sustainable Technologies, Elsevier, pp. 149–157, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-409548-9.10190-3, ISBN 978-0-12-804792-7, retrieved 2022-04-04
  12. ^ Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction; International Energy Agency; United Nations Environment Programme (2019). "2019 Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction Towards a zero-emissions, efficient, and resilient buildings and construction sector" (PDF). UN environment programme Document Repository. United Nations Environment Programme. (PDF) from the original on 21 October 2020. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  13. ^ Tapper, James (Jul 28, 2019). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on July 28, 2019. Retrieved Sep 7, 2023.
  14. ^ . phys.org. Oct 19, 2019. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved Sep 7, 2021.
  15. ^ "Buildings – Analysis".
  16. ^ Goodhew S 2016 Sustainable Construction Processes A Resource Text. John Wiley & Son
  17. ^ Towards zero-emission efficient and resilient buildings GLOBAL STATUS REPORT 2016 (PDF). Global Alliance for Buildings and construction. 2016. p. 8. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  18. ^ Watson, Donald (2013), Loftness, Vivian; Haase, Dagmar (eds.), "Bioclimatic Designbioclimaticdesign", Sustainable Built Environments, New York, NY: Springer, pp. 1–30, doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5828-9_225, ISBN 978-1-4614-5828-9, retrieved 2023-07-12
  19. ^ "Bioclimatic architecture, buildings that respect the environment". Iberdrola. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
  20. ^ . Pb.unimelb.edu.au. Archived from the original on 2014-02-14. Retrieved 2014-08-22.
  21. ^ Bru, G.; Herrera, G.; Tomás, R.; Duro, J.; Vega, R. De la; Mulas, J. (2013-02-01). "Control of deformation of buildings affected by subsidence using persistent scatterer interferometry". Structure and Infrastructure Engineering. 9 (2): 188–200. doi:10.1080/15732479.2010.519710. ISSN 1573-2479. S2CID 110521863.
  22. ^ Soldato, Matteo Del; Bianchini, Silvia; Calcaterra, Domenico; Vita, Pantaleone De; Martire, Diego Di; Tomás, Roberto; Casagli, Nicola (2017-07-12). "A new approach for landslide-induced damage assessment" (PDF). Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk. 8 (2): 1524–1537. doi:10.1080/19475705.2017.1347896. ISSN 1947-5705. S2CID 73697187.
  23. ^ Brotóns, V.; Tomás, R.; Ivorra, S.; Alarcón, J. C. (2013-12-17). "Temperature influence on the physical and mechanical properties of a porous rock: San Julian's calcarenite". Engineering Geology. 167 (Supplement C): 117–127. doi:10.1016/j.enggeo.2013.10.012.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of building at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Buildings at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Building at Wikiquote

building, making, buildings, construction, structures, intended, human, occupancy, nonbuilding, structure, other, uses, disambiguation, another, edifice, casio, edifice, technical, reasons, redirects, here, store, chain, this, article, needs, additional, citat. For the act of making buildings see Construction For structures not intended for human occupancy see Nonbuilding structure For other uses see Building disambiguation For another use of Edifice see Casio Edifice For technical reasons Building 19 redirects here For the store chain see Building 19 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Building news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A building or edifice is an enclosed structure with a roof and walls usually standing permanently in one place 1 such as a house or factory 1 Buildings come in a variety of sizes shapes and functions and have been adapted throughout history for numerous factors from building materials available to weather conditions land prices ground conditions specific uses prestige and aesthetic reasons To better understand the concept see Nonbuilding structure for contrast Short visual history of architectural styles from left to right the Ishtar Gate Mesopotamian the Temple of Isis from Philae Ancient Egyptian the Maison Carree Greco Roman the Kandariya Mahadeva Temple Indian the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests of the Temple of Heaven Chinese the Basilica of San Vitale Byzantine Badshahi Mosque Islamic the Durham Cathedral Romanesque Sainte Chapelle Gothic the Tempietto Renaissance Chateau de Maisons Baroque boiserie from the Hotel de Varengeville Rococo the Petit Trianon Neoclassical Grand Central Terminal Midtown Manhattan New York City Beaux Arts the Castel Beranger Art Nouveau the Theatre des Champs Elysees Art Deco the Fagus Factory Modern and the Neue Staatsgalerie Postmodern Buildings serve several societal needs occupancy primarily as shelter from weather security living space privacy to store belongings and to comfortably live and work A building as a shelter represents a physical separation of the human habitat a place of comfort and safety from the outside a place that may be harsh and harmful at times Ever since the first cave paintings buildings have been objects or canvasses of much artistic expression In recent years interest in sustainable planning and building practices has become an intentional part of the design process of many new buildings and other structures usually green buildings Contents 1 Definition 2 History 3 Types 3 1 Residential 3 2 Commercial 3 3 Industrial 3 4 Agricultural 3 5 Mixed use 3 6 Complex 4 Creation 4 1 Ownership and funding 5 Environmental impacts 6 Building services 6 1 Physical plant 6 2 Conveying systems 7 Building damage 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksDefinition edit nbsp Skyscrapers under construction in Kalasatama Helsinki Finland 2021 A building is a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place 1 there was a three storey building on the corner it was an imposing edifice In the broadest interpretation a fence or wall is a building 2 However the word structure is used more broadly than building to include natural and human made formations 3 and ones that do not have walls structure is more often used for a fence Sturgis Dictionary included that building differs from architecture in excluding all idea of artistic treatment and it differs from construction in the idea of excluding scientific or highly skilful treatment 4 Structural height in technical usage is the height to the highest architectural detail on the building from street level Spires and masts may or may not be included in this height depending on how they are classified Spires and masts used as antennas are not generally included The distinction between a low rise and high rise building is a matter of debate but generally three stories or less is considered low rise 5 History editSee also History of architecture There is clear evidence of homebuilding from around 18 000 BC 6 Buildings became common during the Neolithic period 7 Types editMain article List of building types nbsp A timber framed house in Marburg Germany nbsp Belle Epoque city house on Strada Arthur Verona in Bucharest Romania currently part of a bookshop nbsp The Mitilineu House a city house in Bucharest dating from 1898Residential edit Main article List of house types This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Building news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Single family residential buildings are most often called houses or homes Multi family residential buildings containing more than one dwelling unit are called duplexes or apartment buildings Condominiums are apartments that occupants own rather than rent Houses may be built in pairs semi detached or in terraces where all but two of the houses have others on either side Apartments may be built round courtyards or as rectangular blocks surrounded by plots of ground Houses built as single dwellings may later be divided into apartments or bedsitters or converted to other uses e g offices or shops Hotels especially of the extended stay variety apartels can be classed as residential Building types may range from huts to multimillion dollar high rise apartment blocks able to house thousands of people Increasing settlement density in buildings and smaller distances between buildings is usually a response to high ground prices resulting from the desire of many people to live close to their places of employment or similar attractors Terms for residential buildings reflect such characteristics as function e g holiday cottage vacation home or timeshare if occupied seasonally size cottage or great house value shack or mansion manner of construction log home or mobile home architectural style castle or Victorian and proximity to geographical features earth shelter stilt house houseboat or floating home For residents in need of special care or those society considers dangerous enough to deprive of liberty there are institutions nursing homes orphanages psychiatric hospitals and prisons and group housing barracks and dormitories Historically many people lived in communal buildings called longhouses smaller dwellings called pit houses and houses combined with barns sometimes called housebarns Common building materials include brick concrete stone and combinations thereof Buildings are defined to be substantial permanent structures Such forms as yurts and motorhomes are therefore considered dwellings but not buildings Commercial edit A commercial building is one in which at least one business is based and people do not live Examples include stores restaurant and hotels citation needed Industrial edit Industrial buildings are those in which heavy industry is done such as manufacturing These edifices include warehouses and factories citation needed Agricultural edit Agricultural buildings are the outbuildings such as barns located on farms citation needed Mixed use edit Some buildings incorporate several or multiple different uses most commonly commercial and residential citation needed Complex edit nbsp Aluminum panel framed steel building in KoreaSometimes a group of inter related and possibly inter connected builds are referred to as a complex for example a housing complex 8 educational complex 9 hospital complex etc Creation editThe practice of designing constructing and operating buildings is most usually a collective effort of different groups of professionals and trades Depending on the size complexity and purpose of a particular building project the project team may include A real estate developer who secures funding for the project One or more financial institutions or other investors that provide the funding Local planning and code authorities A surveyor who performs an ALTA ACSM and construction surveys throughout the project Construction managers who coordinate the effort of different groups of project participants Licensed architects and engineers who provide building design and prepare construction documents The principal design Engineering disciplines which would normally include the following professionals Civil Structural Mechanical building services or HVAC heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning Electrical Building Services Plumbing and drainage Also other possible design Engineer specialists may be involved such as Fire prevention Acoustic facade engineers building physics Telecoms AV Audio Visual BMS Building Management Systems Automatic controls etc These design Engineers also prepare construction documents which are issued to specialist contractors to obtain a price for the works and to follow for the installations Landscape architects Interior designers Other consultants Contractors who provide construction services and install building systems such as climate control electrical plumbing decoration fire protection security and telecommunications Marketing or leasing agents Facility managers who are responsible for operating the building Regardless of their size or intended use all buildings in the US must comply with zoning ordinances building codes and other regulations such as fire codes life safety codes and related standards Vehicles such as trailers caravans ships and passenger aircraft are treated as buildings for life safety purposes Ownership and funding edit Mortgage loan Real estate developerEnvironmental impacts editThis section is an excerpt from Green building Reducing environmental impact edit Buildings represent a large part of energy electricity water and materials consumption As of 2020 they account for 37 of global energy use and energy related CO2 emissions which the United Nations estimate contributed to 33 of overall worldwide emissions 10 11 Including the manufacturing of building materials the global CO2 emissions were 39 12 If new technologies in construction are not adopted during this time of rapid growth emissions could double by 2050 according to the United Nations Environment Program Glass buildings especially all glass skyscrapers contribute significantly to climate change due to their energy inefficiency While these structures are visually appealing and allow abundant natural light they also trap heat necessitating increased use of air conditioning systems which contribute to higher carbon emissions Experts advocate for design modifications and potential restrictions on all glass edifices to mitigate their detrimental environmental impact 13 14 Buildings account for a large amount of land According to the National Resources Inventory approximately 107 million acres 430 000 km2 of land in the United States are developed The International Energy Agency released a publication that estimated that existing buildings are responsible for more than 40 of the world s total primary energy consumption and for 24 of global carbon dioxide emissions 15 16 According to Global status report from the year 2016 buildings consume more than 30 of all produced energy The report states that Under a below 2 C trajectory effective action to improve building energy efficiency could limit building final energy demand to just above current levels meaning that the average energy intensity of the global building stock would decrease by more than 80 by 2050 17 nbsp Hanging gardens of One Central Park SydneyGreen building practices aim to reduce the environmental impact of building as the building sector has the greatest potential to deliver significant cuts in emissions at little or no cost General guidelines can be summarized as follows Every building should be as small as possible Avoid contributing to sprawl even if the most energy efficient environmentally sound methods are used in design and construction Bioclimatic design principles are able to reduce energy expenditure and by extension carbon emissions Bioclimatic design is a method of building design that takes local climate into account to create comfortable conditions within the structure 18 19 This could be as simple as constructing a different shape for the building envelope or facing the building towards the south to maximize solar exposure for energy or lighting purposes Given the limitations of city planned construction bioclimatic principles may be employed on a lesser scale however it is still an effective passive method to reduce environmental impact See also Green building Low energy house and Zero energy buildingBuilding services editPhysical plant edit Main article Physical plant nbsp The BB amp T Building in Macon Georgia is constructed of aluminum Any building requires a certain general amount of internal infrastructure to function which includes such elements like heating cooling power and telecommunications water and wastewater etc Especially in commercial buildings such as offices or factories these can be extremely intricate systems taking up large amounts of space sometimes located in separate areas or double floors false ceilings and constitute a big part of the regular maintenance required Conveying systems edit Systems for transport of people within buildings Elevator nbsp An under construction building in Pune India It is a high rise building located in the South Eastern Part of the city In an area commonly known as Nine Hills Escalator Moving sidewalk horizontal and inclined Systems for transport of people between interconnected buildings Skyway Underground cityBuilding damage edit nbsp A building in Massueville Quebec Canada engulfed by fireBuildings may be damaged during construction or during maintenance They may be damaged by accidents 20 involving storms explosions subsidence caused by mining water withdrawal 21 or poor foundations and landslides 22 Buildings may suffer fire damage 23 and flooding They may become dilapidated through lack of proper maintenance or alteration work improperly carried out See also edit nbsp Architecture portalAutonomous building Commercial modular construction Earthquake engineering Float glass Hurricane proof building List of largest buildings List of tallest buildings Lists of buildings and structures Natural building Natural disaster and earthquake Skyscraper Steel building TentReferences edit a b c Max J Egenhofer 2002 Geographic Information Science Second International Conference GIScience 2002 Boulder CO USA September 25 28 2002 Proceedings Springer Science amp Business Media p 110 ISBN 978 3 540 44253 0 Building def 2 Whitney William Dwight and Benjamin E Smith The Century dictionary and cyclopedia vol 1 New York Century Co 1901 712 Print Structure def 2 Merriam Webster s dictionary of synonyms a dictionary of discriminated synonyms with antonyms and analogous and contrasted words Springfield Mass Merriam Webster 1984 787 Print Building def 1 Sturgis Russell A dictionary of architecture and building biographical historical and descriptive vol 1 New York The Macmillan Co 1901 2236 Print Paul Francis Wendt and Alan Robert Cerf 1979 Real estate investment analysis and taxation McGraw Hill p 210 Rob Dunn Aug 23 2014 Meet the lodgers Wildlife in the great indoors New Scientist 34 37 Archived from the original on 2014 11 29 Pace Anthony 2004 Tarxien In Daniel Cilia ed Malta before History The World s Oldest Free Standing Stone Architecture Miranda Publishers ISBN 978 9990985085 plans to convert housing complex Archived from the original on 2017 01 10 Retrieved 2017 02 23 isye building complex Archived from the original on 2017 01 03 2020 Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction Towards a Zero emissions Efficient and Resilient Buildings and Construction Sector Executive Summary 2020 Nord Natasa 2017 Building Energy Efficiency in Cold Climates Encyclopedia of Sustainable Technologies Elsevier pp 149 157 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 409548 9 10190 3 ISBN 978 0 12 804792 7 retrieved 2022 04 04 Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction International Energy Agency United Nations Environment Programme 2019 2019 Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction Towards a zero emissions efficient and resilient buildings and construction sector PDF UN environment programme Document Repository United Nations Environment Programme Archived PDF from the original on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 20 October 2020 Tapper James Jul 28 2019 Experts call for ban on glass skyscrapers to save energy in climate crisis The Guardian Archived from the original on July 28 2019 Retrieved Sep 7 2023 Wasteful steel and glass buildings fuel global climate injustice says climate expert phys org Oct 19 2019 Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved Sep 7 2021 Buildings Analysis Goodhew S 2016 Sustainable Construction Processes A Resource Text John Wiley amp Son Towards zero emission efficient and resilient buildings GLOBAL STATUS REPORT 2016 PDF Global Alliance for Buildings and construction 2016 p 8 Retrieved 1 April 2022 Watson Donald 2013 Loftness Vivian Haase Dagmar eds Bioclimatic Designbioclimaticdesign Sustainable Built Environments New York NY Springer pp 1 30 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 5828 9 225 ISBN 978 1 4614 5828 9 retrieved 2023 07 12 Bioclimatic architecture buildings that respect the environment Iberdrola Retrieved 2022 04 03 Building Damage Pb unimelb edu au Archived from the original on 2014 02 14 Retrieved 2014 08 22 Bru G Herrera G Tomas R Duro J Vega R De la Mulas J 2013 02 01 Control of deformation of buildings affected by subsidence using persistent scatterer interferometry Structure and Infrastructure Engineering 9 2 188 200 doi 10 1080 15732479 2010 519710 ISSN 1573 2479 S2CID 110521863 Soldato Matteo Del Bianchini Silvia Calcaterra Domenico Vita Pantaleone De Martire Diego Di Tomas Roberto Casagli Nicola 2017 07 12 A new approach for landslide induced damage assessment PDF Geomatics Natural Hazards and Risk 8 2 1524 1537 doi 10 1080 19475705 2017 1347896 ISSN 1947 5705 S2CID 73697187 Brotons V Tomas R Ivorra S Alarcon J C 2013 12 17 Temperature influence on the physical and mechanical properties of a porous rock San Julian s calcarenite Engineering Geology 167 Supplement C 117 127 doi 10 1016 j enggeo 2013 10 012 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Building nbsp The dictionary definition of building at Wiktionary nbsp Media related to Buildings at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Building at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Building amp oldid 1192215400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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