
RESHAPING THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Ecology, Ethics, and Economics
Charles J. Kibert(Editor)
Island Press
Published on 1. May 1999
Book
Paperback/Softback
378 pages
978-1-55963-702-2 (ISBN)
Description
Because of the profound effects of the built environment on the availability of natural resources for future generations, those involved with designing, creating, operating, renovating, and demolishing human structures have a vital role to play in working to put society on a path toward sustainability.
This volume presents the thinking of leading academics and professionals in planning, civil engineering, economics, ecology, architecture, landscape architecture, construction, and related fields who are seeking to discover ways of creating a more sustainable built environment. Contributors address the broad range of issues involved, offering both insights and practical examples. In the book:
Stephen Kellert describes the scope of the looming ecological crisis
Herman Daly explains the unsustainability of the world's economic system and the dangers inherent in the current movement toward globalization
John Todd describes the evolution of wastewater processing systems inspired by natural systems
John Tillman Lyle discusses the importance of landscape in the creation of the human environment
Randall Arendt argues for a fundamental shift in land development patterns that would not only provide for more green space in new developments, but would also increase the profitability of developers and the quality of life for new home owners
Thomas E. Graedel proposes the application of lessons learned from the emerging science of industrial ecology to the creation of "green" building.
While the transition to sustainability will not be easy, natural systems provide abundant models of architecture, engineering, production, and waste conversion that can be used in rethinking the human habitat and its interconnections. This volume provides insights that can light the way to a new era in which a reshaped built environment will not only provide improved human living conditions, but will also protect and respect the earth's essential natural life-support systems and resources.
This volume presents the thinking of leading academics and professionals in planning, civil engineering, economics, ecology, architecture, landscape architecture, construction, and related fields who are seeking to discover ways of creating a more sustainable built environment. Contributors address the broad range of issues involved, offering both insights and practical examples. In the book:
Stephen Kellert describes the scope of the looming ecological crisis
Herman Daly explains the unsustainability of the world's economic system and the dangers inherent in the current movement toward globalization
John Todd describes the evolution of wastewater processing systems inspired by natural systems
John Tillman Lyle discusses the importance of landscape in the creation of the human environment
Randall Arendt argues for a fundamental shift in land development patterns that would not only provide for more green space in new developments, but would also increase the profitability of developers and the quality of life for new home owners
Thomas E. Graedel proposes the application of lessons learned from the emerging science of industrial ecology to the creation of "green" building.
While the transition to sustainability will not be easy, natural systems provide abundant models of architecture, engineering, production, and waste conversion that can be used in rethinking the human habitat and its interconnections. This volume provides insights that can light the way to a new era in which a reshaped built environment will not only provide improved human living conditions, but will also protect and respect the earth's essential natural life-support systems and resources.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Princeton University Press
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
503 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-55963-702-2 (9781559637022)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Edited by Charles J. Kibert; Foreword by Alex Wilson
Content
The promises and limits of sustainability; ecological challenge, human values and sustainability; environmental ethics; uneconomic growth and the built environment; renewable energy technologies; building materials; ecological design, living machines and pure water; landscape; construction and demolition waste; bulding values; architecture as pedagogy; urban planning; creating greener communities; environmentally superior buildings; environmental performance of buildings; sustainable new towns.