Sustainability Flashcards

1
Q

I = PAT formula

A

Impact = Population x Affluence x Technology

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2
Q

Definition of sustainability

A

Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

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3
Q

High risk environmental problems

A
  1. Habitat alteration and destruction
  2. Species extinction
  3. Loss of biodiversity
  4. Ozone depletion
  5. Global climate change
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4
Q

Pipe materials

A

ABS: lighter than PVC, but 2x cost. Good expansion but toxic materials.
Cast iron: Still used but expensive to install because of weight. No less durable than PVC.
Concrete: heavy and expensive to install
HPDE: lowest cost, lightest weight and most flexible. Simple to manufacture and recycle. Greatest expansion coefficient so limited use.
PVC: carcinogenic emissions, difficult to recycle and burn, made with lead and other toxins.
Vitrified Clay Pipe (vcp): mostly replaced by PVC but lighter
Recycled plastic: not used in US yet

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5
Q

Environmental strategies with concrete

A
  • accurate estimate of material
  • precast reduces waste
  • specify fly ash and Portland mixtures to reduce amount of material required (stronger)
  • crush and reuse existing concrete for fill
  • collect washout water and control runoff
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6
Q

Stormwater pollution prevention plan (swppp)

A

Required for site permit for sites larger than an acre?

  • Erosion, sediment and sw mgmt requirements
  • identify proposed activity or sources of water pollution and steps to prevent and respond to pollution
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7
Q

National pollutant discharge elimination system

A

1972, part of clean water act
Identifies point sources and more ambiguous non point sources of pollution
Requires design team to submit SWPPP along with permit

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8
Q

Life Cycle Assessment and 4 parts

A

Evaluates environmental impact of a product or building. Important part of LEED Materials and Resources category.

  1. Define limits, goals and scope of study so alternatives can be compared equally.
  2. Perform inventory analysis: inputs and outputs of the product.
  3. Perform impact assessment: Examines inventory analysis and impact on environment.
  4. Improvement analysis and report: Suggestions for reducing impact.
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9
Q

Graywater systems

A

Water can be reused for irrigation, toilet flushing, vehicle washing, janitorial cleaning, and cooling. Generally only cost-effective in new construction and where use of non-drinking water (potable water) is high (laundromats, car washes).

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10
Q

Water used by toilet flushing

A

U.S. EPA max: 1.6 gal per flush

Low flow: 1.5 qt (0.375 gal)

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11
Q

Calcuations for rainwater collection

A

Catchment area x avg annual rainfall for region x factor to account for evaporation (ave. 0.75)
1 in of rainfall yields 0.6 gal of rainwater per SF of catchment area

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12
Q

Inventory analysis 4 parts for LCA

A
  1. Raw material aquisition
  2. Manufacturing
  3. Use and maintenance
  4. Disposal
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13
Q

Whole building LCA

A

Compare building design to reference design of typical construction for same size and location. To receive LEED credit, building design must outperform reference design in 3/6 categories: Acidification, eutrophication, formation of ground level ozone, global warming, ozone layer depletion, and depletion of non-renewable resources.

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14
Q

Embodied energy

A

Energy requried for extraction, processing, manufacturing or fabrication, transportation, waste and pollution.
High: aluminum, carpet, linoleum, paint, vinyl flooring
Low: stone, marble, clay brick, lumber, cork, gypsum wallboard

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15
Q

Mean Radiant Temperature

A

Factor of human comfort. The weighted mean temperature of all the objects surrounding the body.

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16
Q

Depth sun can reach in a room

A

Twice the head height of the window. Watch out for units/

17
Q

Cold Climate Passive Heating/Cooling Strategies

A
  • maximize solar heat gain
  • minimize exposure to wind
  • provide compact building form
  • place low on a hill
18
Q

Temperate Climate Passive Heating/Cooling Strategies

A
  • maximize solar gain in winter
  • reduce solar gain in summer
  • reduce exposure to wind in winter
  • allow exposure to wind in summer (see tree types)
  • place higher on a hill
19
Q

Hot/Arid Climate Passive Heating/Cooling Strategies

A

• maximize shade and minimize wind (probably
because hot wind is uncomfortable)
• courtyard building types
• at bottom of hill on flat topography

20
Q

Hot/Humid Climate Passive Heating/Cooling Strategies

A
• maximize shade
• maximize wind
• place at top of hill
• courtyard building types, lots of interior access to
wind