Sustainability – Win or Win Situation

economics

 

Often a building is only thought as an equipment inside the area that it’s implemented, but it is impossible to separate it from it’s surroundings. The construction of any building directly influences the infrastructure of cities. Read More »

Posted in Economics of Sustainability, Raphael Teixeira Libonati  | Comments closed

• The answer to our problems lies with buildings. Do you actually believe you can separate buildings out from the infrastructure of cities and mobility of transit and the expectations and incentives of people? Buildings and property developments are in certain stages derivatives of transportation system and infrastructure. The example of London: the creation of Cross Rail (still in progress)- a fast ling into central london from western and eastern suburbs, lead to increased development in the to-be connected areas, such as Acton Town in the West London.

• Why do people tend to believe that what is financially profitable (for developers) is not actually equivalent to economically feasible (positive impacts on social welfare)? The biggest issue with investors and developers fleeing to prime properties is the lack of integration of side-effects and the fact that each individual development does not reflect the full social cost and strain it puts on infrastructure and transportation. The investors may not fully compensate for the negative externalities of ‘shiny’ towers (such as congestion, obstruction of sun, exclusion, widening of the income gap in the area etc.) with benefits provided (e.g. contribution to green spaces). Highest profitability project generally are concentrated on the highest yields. In addition, marginal income and relative measures of profitability are not always the necessary and only driver of development- the volume of investment also matters, as it drives fees for managers, which often translates into expensive prime developments as opposed to e.g. regeneration or secondary properties, which tend to require less capital. The risk associated with sub-prime real estate directly translates into the volume invested in it- as developers flee to quality, which in turn is a less volatile class of assets. This means that the secondary properties enjoy a lesser degree of investment and investment flows, which widens the gap between the prime and sub-prime, as widely observable in commercial properties across europe right now.

• How would you show that this does not necessarily have to be like this (but rather the opposite)? It is virtually impossible to put all the incentives and disincentives in place in order to push for only socially beneficial products on the market. However, there are some carrot and stick instruments the central planners may employ in order to incentives desirable behavior. Examples of such imposed control are zoning, planning obligation to provide on-site affordable housing, green space, contribution to transport budget, guidance for design and use of the building and mixed-use developments. There is a great scope in imposing ‘green building’ requirements for improving social welfare. This however may significantly decrease the profitability of central developments, and shift investor focus to less restricted locations.

Posted in Agnieszka Wanda Janusz | Comments closed

Architecture not in isolation

Architecture cannot be studied in isolation and is greatly benefited from having knowledge not only about the construction industry but understanding the political economic and social environment of the surrounding. The understanding of the various systems helps us redefine what is feasible and what may just be a temporary solution. Although we may believe that social and economic profits cannot coexist this is not entirely true as seen in the cases of redevelopment after wars or even in the water supply solution provided in New York.   Read More »

Posted in Mamta Srinivas | Tagged , , | Comments closed

“Cool People Ride Electric”

Firstly, sustainable architecture can be perceived as many things – the current fashion being “green” architecture. One could also, however, see sustainable architecture as an architecture which sustains itself financially – the ongoing development and evolution of architecture throughout history has required a financial basis – in the form of clients, or patrons. Ongoing sustainability in terms of viability of architecture requires an ongoing financial input. “Sustainability overall is about the permanence of processes” – a permanence of process also requires a permanence of available funds. Therefore, sustainability as a word itself is subjective.

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SUSTAINABILITY VS SOCIETY

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Talking of architecture and sustainability in Peru is something very complex. We have 28 of the 32 climates that exist in the planet that makes our country very unique in terms of having almost every ecosystem in the world. We could have the posibility of taking advantage of the diversity we have but in practice that doesn’t happened at all. Read More »

Posted in Economics of Sustainability, Sofia Kcomt Villacorta, Uncategorized | Comments closed