Sustainable Design and Construction: An Analysis of the West Cambridge Engineering Campus

Title

Sustainable Design and Construction: An Analysis of the West Cambridge Engineering Campus

Authors

1. Fedrick Rola, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Postdoctoral Researcher, Singapore

Abstract

This paper explores the sustainable design and construction approaches employed in developing the new engineering campus at the University of Cambridge. With sustainability as a core driver, the design aimed to minimize whole-life energy consumption and carbon footprint while providing an environment conducive to occupant well-being and promoting future flexibility. Using the innovative Energy Cost Metric (ECM) developed in collaboration with Sir David MacKay, this project exemplifies how whole-life energy assessments can guide sustainable decision-making in construction. Key sustainability strategies include energy-efficient building design, natural ventilation, renewable energy use, and integrating advanced building materials like self-healing concrete. The paper discusses the building's contribution to reducing embodied carbon, enhancing biodiversity, and promoting long-term adaptability, highlighting its alignment with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Keywords

Sustainable design energy efficiency embodied carbon renewable energy building performance flexibility biodiversity self-healing concrete

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Conclusion

The University of Cambridge's new engineering campus is a model of sustainable building design. The project demonstrates how academic institutions can lead the way in sustainable construction by minimizing whole-life energy and carbon, enhancing occupant comfort, and ensuring future adaptability. Integrating innovations like self-healing concrete, dynamic solar shading, and data-driven performance monitoring ensures that the building will meet its sustainability goals for years. This project also serves as a valuable case study for the construction industry, providing lessons that can be applied to future sustainable building designs.

Reference

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Author Contribution

The author alone is responsible for the study's conception, design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, and manuscript preparation.

Funding

This research, including authorship and publication, did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or non-profit sectors.

Software Information

This research did not utilize any specific software or tools

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest related to this study.

Acknowledge

I appreciate the support and expertise of everyone who contributed to this research and manuscript writing, as well as the insightful comments from anonymous reviewers.

Data availability

Data sharing is not applicable to this article.