Author is a structural engineer who has designed sustainable building world-wide He founded the Ecological Building Network He has written three other books on low-carbon building The embodied carbon of building materials accounts for 10% of global carbon emissions The author believes the future of building will be an amalgam of the best of traditional and modern construction technologies This book explains how it is possible to build using materials which create a carbon sink, absorbing more carbon than they emit through construction materials and the building process The resulting buildings cost less to build and are more comfortable to live in Covers wood, alternatives to concrete, recycled plastic waste, and materials inspired by biomimicry
Bruce King is a registered structural engineer in private practice in San Rafael, California. He is the author of Buildings of Earth and Straw: Structural Design for Straw Bale and Rammed Earth Architecture (1996) and Design of Straw Bale Buildings; The State of the Art (2006). He is founder and director of the nonprofit Ecological Building Network and co-founder, with his wife Sarah Weller King, of Green Building Press. He lives in San Rafael, California.
Finally finished! It's not that the book isn't good (I thought it was quite enjoyable); it's just that I wasn't in the right state of mind for reading. It seems it's back to reading for me and I couldn't be happier! A nice book for anyone interested in the topic. An insightful one for a novice.
This is a good reference book for a builder who wants to reduce the carbon footprint of their projects. The information is not new or cutting edge, but it is sound information.
This book looks at green building from a new and important angle - buildings that sequester more carbon than is emitted in building and living or working in them. It is wide ranging and offers a variety of perspectives. There is a lot of information, some of it quite technical. I’m not a building’s professional, but I found it readable and most of it easy to understand.
One of the issues in writing a book with multiple authors is addressing the inevitable contradictions of opinions that arise. A seasoned editor might get ahead of the contradictions by including a note explicitly addressing that yes, authors A and B disagreed on x point, and this disagreement is because y consideration. This tells readers that the topic is well-researched and acknowledged, so the contradictions should not cast shadows upon the credibility of the authors and editor. King, unfortunately, did not do an exceptional job of this, and as a result I can’t help but question much of the information presented here.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Although the field is evolving rapidly, this is still a good primer for the importance of looking at the embodied carbon in the built environment and (as of 2017) emerging trends in how to handle it. All architects should read this.