Part I
Core Topics
1
The Environment
It is remarkable to see a âbig pictureâ view of our environment, such as the entire planet Earth photographed from outer space. Against the darkness of space the Earthâs surface is lit by the Sun, that crucial star that governs our planet and supplies it with energy. It is also challenging for us to consider that the Sun and the Earth, like other planetary systems, can happily exist without the current range of life on Earth, including us humans. Compared to such matters, this book has a relatively limited scope!
Used in a broad sense, the term environment means the global surroundings that affect our lives. This is obviously a large and complex topic involving factors that range from big events on the Sun to small events within the molecules of living organisms. Many environmental factors also interact with one another in ways that are important, or even vital to life. For example, the oxygen content of the atmosphere is regulated by the plants of the Earth which take up carbon dioxide from the air and then give back oxygen, which we breathe.
Maintaining and improving the quality of our environment is important to life and to the quality of life. Environmental topics can also have important social and political dimensions with difficult choices to be made and issues to be debated. Added to this, the science and technology of the different topics have many interactions and links which can be difficult to understand.
This book focuses on the science, technology and services relating to the comfort of humans in buildings and the environmental performance of those buildings. These aspects of the built environment have many significant interactions with the wider environment and a secure knowledge of facts, terms and principles is a good basis for understanding the environment.
Overarching environmental matters, such as climate and comfort, are considered in this chapter while later chapters examine topics in more detail. The Resource sections of the book contain supporting information that can be used to review the science behind some of the technologies studied and for the further investigation of topics.
ENVIRONMENTS
Basic terms
The components that make up the wider environment can be subdivided according to various systems, but a major distinction for this book is the difference between the natural environment and the built environment.
âąNatural environment is the entire environment, without human presence or interference.
Notable features of the natural environment include climate, mountains and hills, rivers and lakes, rocks and soil, trees and plants.
âąBuilt environment is formed by the buildings and other structures that humans construct in the natural environment.
Notable features of the built environment include buildings, water and drainage systems, transport systems, power systems, and communication systems.
âąSustainability is the general idea of meeting the needs of the present without compromising the needs of the future. It is about enduring.
âąA green or sustainable building is deliberately designed to minimise impact on the natural environment and to maximise efficiency in the use of resources such as materials, water and energy over the lifecycle of the building.
Related ideas: Green architecture Sustainable architecture Natural building Ecological building Environmental building
Although this book focuses on the environment in and around buildings, there is considerable interaction between different environmental factors, as shown in the simple model of Figure 1.1.
Figure 1.1 Parts of the environment
Connections between environments
From the earliest times, people have adapted their habitat to provide shelter from the weather and other threats to life. Early humans made use of natural shelters, such as caves, and then they built shelters using available materials like animal hides, stones, straw, or wood. Modern buildings involve so many features in design, materials and construction that it is easy to forget that the fundamental aim is to provide an internal environment that is different from the external environment. A built environment responds to the local natural environment, and different types of building are therefore found in different parts of the world. Climate is a major factor in determining the features of building, together with the availability of building materials and skills. Some of these interactions are summarised in Table 1.1. Other influences on types of building are local traditions and international architectural styles.
Vernacular means the local style
Interactions and issues
Some of the interactions between the built and natural environments have effects that cause concern:
âąconsumption of non-replenishable resources such as fossil fuel
âąconsumption of resources without replacement, such as hardwood forests
âąharmful changes to local habitat, such as deforestation
âąharmful changes to global habitat, such as climate change.
Table 1.1 Examples of environmental connections
Natural environment features | Built environment features |
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