Evaluation criteria: “target issues” for sustainable construction

Publisher
Tisková zpráva
22.10.2019 07:00
The 6th LafargeHolcim Awards competition is open for entries until February 25, 2020. The Awards offers a total of USD 2 million in prize money and foregrounds sustainable construction projects and concepts from architecture, engineering, urban planning, materials science, construction technology, and related fields.



To evaluate the diverse submissions received in this global competition, the LafargeHolcim Foundation developed a framework of five "target issues" for sustainable construction. The five domains encompass the sustainable development goals of economic, social and ecological performance – but are extended to include contextual and aesthetic impact specific to the built environment, as well as an indicator for innovation and transferability.

The "target issues" promote strategies for improving the built environment. They are broad enough to enable five independent juries of experts in sustainable construction to evaluate and rank submissions in the Awards competition:
 

Innovation and transferability – Progress

Projects must demonstrate innovative approaches to sustainable development, pushing the envelope of practice and exploring new disciplinary frontiers. Breakthroughs and trend-setting discoveries must be transferable to a range of other applications. Materials should be recyclable and integrated within circular economies. The production of waste should be avoided throughout a structure's use-cycle.

Floating university in Bangladesh

Ethical standards and social inclusion – People

Projects must adhere to the highest ethical standards and promote social inclusion at all stages of construction, from planning and building to use and servicing; to ensure an enduring positive impact on communities. Proposals must demonstrate how they enhance the collective realm and contribute to an affordable and socially inclusive habitat.

Religious and secular complex in Niger

Resource and environmental performance – Planet

Projects must exhibit a sensible use and management of natural resources throughout their entire life cycle. Long-term environmental concerns, especially pertaining to stocks and flows of material, water and energy, should be an integral part of the design philosophy.

Energy and water efficient border control station in USA

Economic viability and compatibility – Prosperity

Projects must be economically feasible and able to secure financing – whether from public, commercial, or concessional sources - while having a positive impact on society and the environment. Avoiding the wasteful consumption of material resources and limiting CO2 emissions, an economy of means in construction is to be promoted. Construction must adhere to the logic of circular economies.

Zero Energy Development units on parking lots in the United Kingdom

Contextual and aesthetic impact – Place

Projects must convey a high standard of architectural quality as a prevalent form of cultural expression. With space, form and aesthetic impact of utmost significance, the material manifestation of the design must make a positive and lasting contribution to the physical, human and cultural environment.

Global Flora at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, USA

Enter the LafargeHolcim Awards competition

The Main Awards category is open to sustainable construction projects at an advanced stage of design, with a high probability of realization. Construction/fabrication must not have started before January 1, 2019. The Awards Next Generation category seeks visionary design concepts and bold ideas at a preliminary stage of design, including design studio and research work. To participate in this category, authors may not be older than 30 years. Students and young professionals are welcome to enter the Main Awards category with projects that have reached an advanced stage of design.
www.lafargeholcim-awards.org
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