<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Pont, U. (2025). Did we Build Enough? Pleadings based on Statistics and Technologies for the Building Stock. In M. Schrenk, T. Popovich, P. Zeile, P. Elisei, C. Beyer, R. Judith, & U. Trattnig (Eds.), <i>REAL CORP 2025: Urban innovation to boldly go where no cities have gone before - medium sized cities and towns as a major arena of global urbanisation : proceedings of 30th International Conference on Urban Planning, Regional Development and Information Society</i> (pp. 287–298). GeoMultimedia. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/215005</div>
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/215005
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dc.description.abstract
This contribution wants to argue for a fundamental transformative change for future development of the built environment in Austria (and generally Central Europe). Thereby, innovative technologies to update and adapt the existing building stock play a fundamental role, to improve comfort and energy performance of existing buildings and built structures. This contribution is based on a talk the author held two years ago about innovative technologies for building stock improvement in view of we built enough as a statement.
When we address the existing building stock, we find buildings and structures that can be considered of high value for European cities appearance. However, an even larger fraction of existing buildings might not be considered as “beautiful” or “identification landmark” for European cities. While the replacement of the sooner would mean an immense loss of identity, the latter might in part be considered as “the ugly child”, but still provides a sink of past Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions. If we would demolish and replace these buildings by new ones, huge energy consumption and GHG emissions would be the consequence, connected
with the demolition, depositing of old materials, and material movements and utilisation of the new buildings, as circularity concepts in the AEC (Architecture – Engineering – Construction) – Domain are not yet well established. Cities are expanding, which can be explained by rising numbers of population, but on the other side also with a increased space consumption of inhabitants. These expanision tendencies on the one hand require extensive overwork of public infrastructure and accelerate sealing of surfaces and loss of natural resources and green-blue infrastrucutres, and on the other hand seem strange, given that we face empty built infrastructures e.g. on groundfloor level in many residential districts.
Toward this end, the present contribution advocates for holistic view of the update possibilities of the building stock, while at the same time critically warns against romantification of the building stock in view of outdated perspectives of the past. Rather, research, technologies and approaches are presented and discussed that have been worked upon in the past 10–15 years and directly address the existing building stock. These efforts all tried to balance out the difficult relation between heritage protection on the one hand, and comfort and energy performance improvements on the other hand.
As such, this contribution tries to utilise the concept of imperial lifestyle as critically brought up by scientistst from environmental political science and maps it on the AEC-domain.
en
dc.description.sponsorship
FFG - Österr. Forschungsförderungs- gesellschaft mbH
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dc.description.sponsorship
FFG - Österr. Forschungsförderungs- gesellschaft mbH
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dc.description.sponsorship
FFG - Österr. Forschungsförderungs- gesellschaft mbH
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dc.description.sponsorship
FFG - Österr. Forschungsförderungs- gesellschaft mbH
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dc.language.iso
en
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dc.subject
Building Stock
en
dc.subject
Space consumption
en
dc.subject
technologies for retrofit
en
dc.subject
pladoyer
en
dc.subject
vacuum glazing
en
dc.title
Did we Build Enough? Pleadings based on Statistics and Technologies for the Building Stock
en
dc.type
Inproceedings
en
dc.type
Konferenzbeitrag
de
dc.relation.isbn
978-3-9504945-4-9
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dc.relation.issn
2521-8050
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dc.description.startpage
287
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dc.description.endpage
298
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dc.relation.grantno
845225
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dc.relation.grantno
886959
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dc.relation.grantno
878272
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dc.relation.grantno
3691393
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dc.relation.grantno
832012
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dc.type.category
Full-Paper Contribution
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tuw.booktitle
REAL CORP 2025: Urban innovation to boldly go where no cities have gone before - medium sized cities and towns as a major arena of global urbanisation : proceedings of 30th International Conference on Urban Planning, Regional Development and Information Society
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tuw.peerreviewed
true
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tuw.relation.publisher
GeoMultimedia
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tuw.project.title
Sondierung von Fenstersystemen mit innovativen Gläsern, speziell Vakuum-Isoliergläsern, zur Gebäudesanierung
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tuw.project.title
Smart (&) Urban Tree - – Eine Möglichkeit vielen Herausforderungen der nahen Zukunft konstruktiv zu begegnen
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tuw.project.title
Vakuumglas-Kastenfenster: Performance-Monitoring in Sanierungsprojekten
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tuw.project.title
Entwicklung von strukturierbaren Deckputzsystemen auf Aerogel-Hochleistungwärmedämmputz für historische Gebäudefassaden
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tuw.project.title
Semantische Technologien zur energieeffizienten Gebäudeplanung
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tuw.researchTopic.id
A2
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tuw.researchTopic.id
E1
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tuw.researchTopic.id
C6
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Urban and Regional Transformation
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Energy Active Buildings, Settlements and Spatial Infrastructures
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Modeling and Simulation
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tuw.researchTopic.value
35
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tuw.researchTopic.value
35
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tuw.researchTopic.value
30
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tuw.publication.orgunit
E259-03 - Forschungsbereich Bauphysik und Bauökologie
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dc.description.numberOfPages
12
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tuw.author.orcid
0000-0001-7320-9620
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tuw.editor.orcid
0000-0002-0727-7948
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tuw.editor.orcid
0000-0003-4659-2753
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tuw.event.name
30th International Conference on Urban Planning and Regional Development in the Information Society