Publication | Open Access
Widening engineering horizons: addressing the complexity of sustainable development
72
Citations
8
References
2006
Year
EngineeringEngineering HorizonsSustainable DevelopmentSustainable FutureSustainable ProcessesEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesSustainable DesignSustainable Development PerspectiveSustainability AnalysisEnvironmental ManagementSustainable MaterialsDesignSustainable GoalProblem BoundarySustainable SystemsSustainability AssessmentWastewater Treatment ProjectSustainable PracticeSustainable EnergyCivil EngineeringSustainable ConstructionConstruction ManagementSustainabilityGlobal Sustainability
The complex, fragmented and diverse aspects of a sustainable development perspective are translated into an eight-point framework that defines a problem boundary larger than that traditionally adopted by civil engineers. This leads to practical questions intended to inform engineers who ask ‘am I being sustainable?’ during project implementation. The value of the questions is tested against a case history of a wastewater treatment project. This demonstrates the relevance of the questions to successive project delivery phases of defining the problem, choosing a solution and implementing that solution through design, construction and operation. The case history highlights that answers to several of the additional questions raised by considering this wider problem space are currently buried within government and clients' policies, regulations and standard practice; these answers may not be accessible to the professional engineer.
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