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The Issue

​​​​​​​​​​​Designing Waste Out of the Syste​​m

The built environment refers to all the human-made structures and products that make up the places where people live, work and play. This includes houses, commercial buildings, supporting infrastructure such as waste systems and water supply networks, as well as green spaces. Construction, renovation, and demolition are key activities within our built environment. The construction industry is the world’s largest consumer of resources and raw materials, and is estimated to emit almost half of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Approximately 40% of raw materials consumed in North America are construction materials (CCME 2019).

Common building materials include wood, asphalt, drywall, and concrete. Disposing of building materials is expensive, and highly inefficient, especially given that many disposed materials still hold value. Yet, waste prevention, reduction, and diversion from disposal activities and policies are still very much emergent.

A transformation to a circular built environment, where construction and demolition follows principles of restoration and regeneration, is critical. This transformation prevents waste, and ensures that buildings and materials are circulated at their highest value, with each being used and reused repeatedly.


MOVING TOWARDS CIRCULARITY

Preventing and Reducing Waste in the Built Environment

Designs for disassembly, adaptive reuse, modular construction, and material innovation are examples of key circular strategies that address waste in the built environment. Such strategies require harmonization of metrics, definitions and targets; securing a national building information modelling mandate (BIM); and removing market barriers.

A 2024 report by the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) identified a range of opportunities to advance circularity and drive down waste.

Featu​red Innovations​​

Municipalities and businesses are putting into play some of these opportunities, ranging from support for deconstruction and wood waste diversion, to broader material salvage.

Wood Waste makes up the single largest material disposed by volume. But much of that wood holds value. Businesses and governments across the country are increasingly recognizing the opportunities to recover wood waste and upcycle it.

In ​Metro Vancouver, a range of initiatives aim to reduce construction, renovation, and demolition waste, including changes to policy to require salvage of material for uses beyond disposal.


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