Business Council for Sustainable Development UK
Business Council for Sustainable Development UK
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2010 - 2012Partners:University of Birmingham, CH2M (United States), CH2M Hill Incorporated USA, Birmingham City Council, CPNI +10 partnersUniversity of Birmingham,CH2M (United States),CH2M Hill Incorporated USA,Birmingham City Council,CPNI,Business Council for Sustainable Development UK,BCSD (UK),BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,CPNI,Birmingham City Council,Halcrow Group Limited,Birmingham Science City,Jacobs (United Kingdom),University of Birmingham,Birmingham Science CityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I016163/1Funder Contribution: 202,742 GBPThe physical infrastructure that facilitates the transport of people, freight, waste and utility services, and thus provides the essential support to civilised life, is under threat from numerous sources: deterioration through (often extreme) ageing, adverse ground chemistry, surface loading or stress relief due to open-cut interventions; severely increased demand; ever changing (different, or altered) demands; terrorism; the effects of climate change; funding constraints and severe natural hazards (extreme weather events, earthquakes, landslides, etc.). Such vulnerability, and the need for resilience in the face of such threats, is recognised widely - see Building Britain's Future17 and the ICE's State of The Nation Report: Defending Critical Infrastructure18 (both 2009), and the aims of the new Infrastructure UK delivery body18. This feasibility study seeks to explore radically different ways of conceptualising, designing, constructing, maintaining, managing, adapting and valuing the physical infrastructure to make it resilient no matter which threats are manifested or how the future develops. In this context resilience refers to the symbiosis existing between infrastructure, management systems and end users.Recent years have witnessed a shift to a more transdisciplinary concept of resilience that integrates the physical (both built and natural) and socio-political aspects of resilience. This change has been crucial because the socio-political and managerial aspects are arguably as important to the attainment of resilience as the physical aspects; resilient engineering also demands a more resilient infrastructural context with regard to the professions and the structures and processes which govern engineering activity.This proposal explores the engineering and social dimensions of resilience research needed to bring about radical changes in thinking and practice for an assured future in the face of multiple challenges. The following represent two core resilience themes at the interface of engineering, spatial planning and social science, from which feasibility studies to address key challenges will emerge via a series of workshops. The tangible manifestation lies in Local Area Agreements - a set of 32 centrally-approved and locally-implemented performance indicators linking engineered solutions, mechanisms for adoption, behavioural adaptation and education.1. Bespoke local utility infrastructures for resilient communities2. The role of transport in societal resilienceThe research team draws from five major research groups at the University of Birmingham, all of whom are addressing core themes of infrastructure and resilience. The team is supported by innovative thinkers drawn from the stakeholder community, both practitioners and policy makers. The primary themes to be studied are the creation of local utility infrastructures and transport to deliver resilience, recognising the UK shift towards enhancing innovation in the public/private sectors and local decision-making and delivery. Our team will deepen trans-disciplinary research by overcoming the tension that exists between the engineering focus on solutions and the social scientists concern with problems by developing realistic solutions to local problems. This requires exploration of the interface between four communities of practice: engineering and physical sciences, social sciences, private firms and local government. The intention is to identify solutions that reduce costs and enhance delivery, but also to identify new projects that have the potential to create innovative products that have commercial value.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2008Partners:University of Birmingham, MADE, MARTINEAU JOHNSON, The Carbon Trust, BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL +29 partnersUniversity of Birmingham,MADE,MARTINEAU JOHNSON,The Carbon Trust,BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,Carbon Trust,SGH Martineau (United Kingdom),Government Office West Midlands,Government Office West Midlands,UK Water Industry Research,Royal Institute of British Architects,RSWT,Science and Technology Facilities Council,BCSD (UK),Building Research Establishment Ltd BRE,South East England Regional Assembly,ISIS,BRE,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,Birmingham City Council,South East England Regional Assembly,WILDLIFE TRUST FOR BIRMINGHAM,Birmingham City Council,Advantage West Midlands,Business Council for Sustainable Development UK,Building Research Establishment,MADE,Department for Infrastructure,Arup Group Ltd,ISIS,Arup Group (United Kingdom),UK Water Industry Research Ltd,UK Water Industry Research Ltd,University of BirminghamFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E021603/1Funder Contribution: 512,891 GBPThe aim of the Sustainable Eastside Project is to explore how sustainability is addressed in the regeneration decision-making process, and to assess the sustainability performance of completed development schemes in Birmingham Eastside against stated sustainability credentials and aspirations. The incorporation of sustainability into an urban regeneration program, such as Birmingham Eastside, appears best conceptualised as a complex decision-making process carried out by stakeholders who are embedded within the development process. The barriers to and enablers of sustainability (as identified in Phase I of this project) appear at various moments or locations within this complex. The timing and context of decisions are critical (examined in Phase II), and can cause path-dependency which then limits how sustainability features in final development plans. In Phases I & II, the research set in place a framework of cross-disciplinary knowledge and key partnerships; highlighted the importance of coherent integration of the three pillars of sustainability to enable the complexity of achieving urban sustainability to be sufficiently grappled with; gained access to key decision-making forums in Eastside; built strong links with key stakeholders in the area; and firmly integrated into the policy agenda for Eastside. In addition, researchers are working to establish a cross-cutting baseline dataset of developments in Eastside rigorously to measure change over time and the impact of particular decisions on the sustainability of the overall urban regeneration programme. In so doing the foundations for a zonal urban regeneration case study site are being established, augmented by the creation of a study facility, with library and hot desking, now available for researchers from SUE / IEP consortia, to study the application of research to practice. The emerging findings of Phase II have allowed researchers to develop a series of hypotheses about the timing of decisions for sustainability in a range of decision-making forums, and the extent to which path-dependency becomes problematic. In Phase III, a suite of innovative analytical tools will be employed to elucidate further the complexities and interactions of the key elements of the sustainability vision for Eastside. First, a Development Timeline Framework (DTF), a multi-disciplinary tool that makes explicit the path dependency of decisions toward achieving sustainability goals, and the conflicts and synergies between different sustainability objectives, will be used as the basis for further research. Second, a cross-cutting Sustainability Checklist (SC) applied to the DTF will allow each researcher to analyse the impact of timing and context of decisions for each sustainability element (e.g. biodiversity, public participation, space utilisation, local sourcing, and recycling). Third, an Industrial Ecology (IE) analysis will follow particular resources (e.g. water, aggregates) thus highlighting their interdependence, while a Social Impact Assessment (SIA) approach will enable assessment of the socio-cultural aspects of sustainability (not covered by the IE approach). This suite of tools underpins the delivery of the work package aims. This analysis will be undertaken on a case history site basis, using development sites within Eastside that are all currently 'live,' each site representing a different conceptualisation of sustainability. This provides a unique opportunity to evaluate the specific impact of early thinking about sustainability in the planning and design stages, and the impact of this timing and path-dependency on sustainability performance in the final built form.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2008Partners:Advantage West Midlands, South East England Regional Assembly, BCU, BCSD (UK), MARTINEAU JOHNSON +29 partnersAdvantage West Midlands,South East England Regional Assembly,BCU,BCSD (UK),MARTINEAU JOHNSON,Royal Institute of British Architects,The Carbon Trust,UK Water Industry Research,Science and Technology Facilities Council,BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,BRE,Arup Group Ltd,ISIS,MADE,Building Research Establishment Ltd BRE,Birmingham City Council,South East England Regional Assembly,ISIS,SGH Martineau (United Kingdom),Government Office West Midlands,Government Office West Midlands,Carbon Trust,WILDLIFE TRUST FOR BIRMINGHAM,Birmingham City Council,RSWT,Birmingham City University,Business Council for Sustainable Development UK,Building Research Establishment,MADE,Department for Infrastructure,Arup Group (United Kingdom),UK Water Industry Research Ltd,UK Water Industry Research LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E021956/1Funder Contribution: 111,907 GBPThe aim of the Sustainable Eastside Project is to explore how sustainability is addressed in the regeneration decision-making process, and to assess the sustainability performance of completed development schemes in Birmingham Eastside against stated sustainability credentials and aspirations. The incorporation of sustainability into an urban regeneration program, such as Birmingham Eastside, appears best conceptualised as a complex decision-making process carried out by stakeholders who are embedded within the development process. The barriers to and enablers of sustainability (as identified in Phase I of this project) appear at various moments or locations within this complex. The timing and context of decisions are critical (examined in Phase II), and can cause path-dependency which then limits how sustainability features in final development plans. In Phases I & II, the research set in place a framework of cross-disciplinary knowledge and key partnerships; highlighted the importance of coherent integration of the three pillars of sustainability to enable the complexity of achieving urban sustainability to be sufficiently grappled with; gained access to key decision-making forums in Eastside; built strong links with key stakeholders in the area; and firmly integrated into the policy agenda for Eastside. In addition, researchers are working to establish a cross-cutting baseline dataset of developments in Eastside rigorously to measure change over time and the impact of particular decisions on the sustainability of the overall urban regeneration programme. In so doing the foundations for a zonal urban regeneration case study site are being established, augmented by the creation of a study facility, with library and hot desking, now available for researchers from SUE / IEP consortia, to study the application of research to practice. The emerging findings of Phase II have allowed researchers to develop a series of hypotheses about the timing of decisions for sustainability in a range of decision-making forums, and the extent to which path-dependency becomes problematic. In Phase III, a suite of innovative analytical tools will be employed to elucidate further the complexities and interactions of the key elements of the sustainability vision for Eastside. First, a Development Timeline Framework (DTF), a multi-disciplinary tool that makes explicit the path dependency of decisions toward achieving sustainability goals, and the conflicts and synergies between different sustainability objectives, will be used as the basis for further research. Second, a cross-cutting Sustainability Checklist (SC) applied to the DTF will allow each researcher to analyse the impact of timing and context of decisions for each sustainability element (e.g. biodiversity, public participation, space utilisation, local sourcing, and recycling). Third, an Industrial Ecology (IE) analysis will follow particular resources (e.g. water, aggregates) thus highlighting their interdependence, while a Social Impact Assessment (SIA) approach will enable assessment of the socio-cultural aspects of sustainability (not covered by the IE approach). This suite of tools underpins the delivery of the work package aims. This analysis will be undertaken on a case history site basis, using development sites within Eastside that are all currently 'live,' each site representing a different conceptualisation of sustainability. This provides a unique opportunity to evaluate the specific impact of early thinking about sustainability in the planning and design stages, and the impact of this timing and path-dependency on sustainability performance in the final built form.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2008Partners:University of Sheffield, MADE, WILDLIFE TRUST FOR BIRMINGHAM, Birmingham City Council, Business Council for Sustainable Development UK +30 partnersUniversity of Sheffield,MADE,WILDLIFE TRUST FOR BIRMINGHAM,Birmingham City Council,Business Council for Sustainable Development UK,Carbon Trust,Building Research Establishment,MADE,RSWT,Building Research Establishment Ltd BRE,Department for Infrastructure,Arup Group Ltd,University of Sheffield,ISIS,ISIS,Advantage West Midlands,MARTINEAU JOHNSON,Science and Technology Facilities Council,Royal Institute of British Architects,The Carbon Trust,Royal Inst of British Architects RIBA,BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,BCSD (UK),BRE,South East England Regional Assembly,UK Water Industry Research,Birmingham City Council,South East England Regional Assembly,[no title available],SGH Martineau (United Kingdom),Government Office West Midlands,Government Office West Midlands,Arup Group (United Kingdom),UK Water Industry Research Ltd,UK Water Industry Research LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E025579/1Funder Contribution: 7,129 GBPThe aim of the Sustainable Eastside Project is to explore how sustainability is addressed in the regeneration decision-making process, and to assess the sustainability performance of completed development schemes in Birmingham Eastside against stated sustainability credentials and aspirations. The incorporation of sustainability into an urban regeneration program, such as Birmingham Eastside, appears best conceptualised as a complex decision-making process carried out by stakeholders who are embedded within the development process. The barriers to and enablers of sustainability (as identified in Phase I of this project) appear at various moments or locations within this complex. The timing and context of decisions are critical (examined in Phase II), and can cause path-dependency which then limits how sustainability features in final development plans. In Phases I & II, the research set in place a framework of cross-disciplinary knowledge and key partnerships; highlighted the importance of coherent integration of the three pillars of sustainability to enable the complexity of achieving urban sustainability to be sufficiently grappled with; gained access to key decision-making forums in Eastside; built strong links with key stakeholders in the area; and firmly integrated into the policy agenda for Eastside. In addition, researchers are working to establish a cross-cutting baseline dataset of developments in Eastside rigorously to measure change over time and the impact of particular decisions on the sustainability of the overall urban regeneration programme. In so doing the foundations for a zonal urban regeneration case study site are being established, augmented by the creation of a study facility, with library and hot desking, now available for researchers from SUE / IEP consortia, to study the application of research to practice. The emerging findings of Phase II have allowed researchers to develop a series of hypotheses about the timing of decisions for sustainability in a range of decision-making forums, and the extent to which path-dependency becomes problematic. In Phase III, a suite of innovative analytical tools will be employed to elucidate further the complexities and interactions of the key elements of the sustainability vision for Eastside. First, a Development Timeline Framework (DTF), a multi-disciplinary tool that makes explicit the path dependency of decisions toward achieving sustainability goals, and the conflicts and synergies between different sustainability objectives, will be used as the basis for further research. Second, a cross-cutting Sustainability Checklist (SC) applied to the DTF will allow each researcher to analyse the impact of timing and context of decisions for each sustainability element (e.g. biodiversity, public participation, space utilisation, local sourcing, and recycling). Third, an Industrial Ecology (IE) analysis will follow particular resources (e.g. water, aggregates) thus highlighting their interdependence, while a Social Impact Assessment (SIA) approach will enable assessment of the socio-cultural aspects of sustainability (not covered by the IE approach). This suite of tools underpins the delivery of the work package aims. This analysis will be undertaken on a case history site basis, using development sites within Eastside that are all currently 'live,' each site representing a different conceptualisation of sustainability. This provides a unique opportunity to evaluate the specific impact of early thinking about sustainability in the planning and design stages, and the impact of this timing and path-dependency on sustainability performance in the final built form.
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