Population growth, urbanization, and climate change have significantly contributed to environmental degradation, posing severe consequences for humans and other species. By integrating ecological objectives with human-centric goals, a path towards a sustainable, multi-species future is possible. Current sustainable design principles have shown positive environmental impacts by addressing human-centric objectives such as enhancing green infrastructure, energy efficiency, thermal comfort, and more. However, the incorporation of multi-species design criteria remains unresolved. This paper proposes a conceptual framework in which human-centric and ecological design objectives are defined and associated through the selection of key performance indicators (KPIs) represented by numerical thresholds. But, while the objective-KPI relationship is an established path in architectural design, the same does not apply for preserving and promoting biodiversity. The proposed conceptual framework identifies, defines, and associates the relevant objective-KPI relationships for all stakeholders and becomes the basis for evaluating the project computationally. Such an approach is currently lacking.
CITATION STYLE
Saroglou, S. T., Selvan, S. U., Windorfer, L., Weisser, W. W., Joschinski, J., Hauck, T. E., … Barath, S. (2024). Utilizing Design Objectives and Key Performance Indicators as a Means for Multi-Species Building Envelopes. Buildings, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010250
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