Metadata
Title
Sustainable building design practices
Category
general
UUID
d1e273d5656f4596b14b74fc4bae79dc
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/building-design/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:02:03+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Sustainable building design practices

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/building-design/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Designing out waste through the development of new British Standards on material efficiency

Demolition and construction generate 61% of the UK's total waste - more than 136 million tonnes every year.

Construction has, therefore, been identified as a priority sector for the optimisation of material resource efficiency and waste reduction in the UK - and is acknowledged as a pressing global challenge.

With the UK Government committed to the elimination of avoidable waste by 2050, it is imperative that construction becomes more sustainable now. We are playing a key role in this endeavour.

By accelerating the shift from ‘end-of-pipe’ methods for managing construction waste towards a preventative approach - effectively designing out waste - our research challenges the perception that construction waste is inevitable, and is transforming the industry's understanding of and practices around waste prevention.

Our impact

Guiding international standards and international sustainability certification schemes

Designing for material efficiency in building projects (BSI)

The research

We have conducted research into sustainable building design since 2005, acquiring an international reputation for our innovative work.

We pioneered the development of decision support tools to design out waste, embedding them in building design and infrastructure briefs. This has enabled the industry to improve its materials efficiency and reduce waste throughout the project lifecycle.

Key areas of research have focused on designing out waste, end-of-life asset and material optimisation, and construction and demolition waste recovery.

We have applied our findings to develop waste decision support tools and a design waste mapping approach. Both are widely used and underpin international sustainability assessment schemes and practice – greatly enhancing construction waste prevention and minimization worldwide.

Find out more about BS8895

### UK construction and demolition activities generate 136 million tonnes of waste every year

### The work of ≈56,000 UK architects is guided by BS8895 (Designing for Material Efficiency in Building Projects)

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor Mohamed Osmani

Professor of Sustainable Design and Construction