Full Abstract
The construction, demolition and excavation waste arising in England
was estimated at 91 million tonnes in 2003. The current thinking on
construction waste minimisation is heavily focussed on several issues
relating to physical construction waste and recycling guides. Indeed,
much had been published on ways to improve on-site waste management and
recycling activities but very few attempts made to address the effect
of design practices on waste generation. However, there is a consensus
in the literature that the architect has a decisive role to play in
helping to reduce waste by focussing on designing out waste. This paper
examines previous studies on architects' approach towards construction
waste minimisation; and by means of a postal questionnaire,
investigates: the origins of waste; waste minimisation design practices
in the UK; and responsibilities and barriers within the UK
architectural profession. The findings reveal that waste management is
not a priority in the design process. Additionally, the architects
seemed to take the view that waste is mainly produced during site
operations and rarely generated during the design stages; however,
about one-third of construction waste could essentially arise from
design decisions. Results also indicate that a number of constraints,
namely: lack of interest from clients; attitudes towards waste
minimisation; and training all act as disincentives to a proactive and
sustainable implementation of waste reduction strategies during the
design process.