“Constructing with circular materials is not only good for the planet, but also helps to make the architecture more interesting.” says Hans Hammink, architect and associate at de Architekten Cie. and my today podcast guest. Hans Hammink is an expert in integration the circularity in the architectural process. He was involved in the projects such as CIRCL Pavilion (Amsterdam Zuid), Edge Olympic, bicycle parking facility in Eindhoven, EDGE Amsterdam West. He is also one of the creators of the Building Passport: a digital twin of a building, a 3D model linked to circular data. Hans is also a teacher at the Academy of Architecture in Amsterdam. In 2021 he published a book: Lessons In Circularity.
Construction industry consumes around 60% of the world’s materials. It is responsible for around 53% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, a big part of which is attributed to buildings. The building sector must limit the energy consumption, stop using sources of fossil fuels, limit the CO2 footprint and stop over-exploitation of raw materials. How?
The construction industry should shift towards the circular economy. By closing cycles and reusing materials, we could tremendously limit the waste in the building sector and be more responsible about the climatic consequences.
Links:
The book 'Lessons in Circularity' - free to download
https://www.cie.nl/ebook-circularity?lang=en
Pawilion CIRCL, Amsterdam (De Architekten Cie.):
https://circl.nl/themakingof/en/
Article of Jan Rotmans and Gijs Diercks on the transition towards a circular economy:
https://amsterdameconomicboard.com/en/news/radically-different-collaboration-on-transitions/
Interview with Hans Hammink (about the beginnings in circularity, an unexpected case study in disassembly and the need of a shift in design thinking):
Article on construction sector sustainable problem:
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Enjoy listening!
Klaudia Lachcik