Enhancing Interoperability and Automation of Construction Waste Quantification

£160.00

Enhancing Interoperability and Automation of Construction Waste Quantification

Integration of Building Information Modelling and Semantic Web Technology

Environmentally-friendly (‘green’) architecture and design Project management Agribusiness and primary industries Construction and heavy industry Waste management Engineering: general Building construction and materials

Authors: Subarna Sivashanmugam, Sergio Rodriguez Trejo, Farzad Pour Rahimian

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Collection: Digital Frontiers in Buildings and Infrastructure

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 28th July 2025

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781040401750


Enhancing Interoperability and Automation of Construction Waste Quantification outlines the construction waste quantification (CWQ) modelling that supports data-driven decision-making in the built environment. It presents how the functionalities of Building Information Modelling (BIM) and Semantic Web Technology are integrated to enhance the interoperability and automation of the CWQ process.

The research in this book shapes the development of a semantic framework that supports the built environment in quantifying construction waste (CW) and informing optimal material choices from early design stages to minimise the quantity and diversity of waste generation. The book also demonstrates the application of the proposed framework using an ontology (PROduct CIRcularity Ontology) and a BIM-integrated digital tool (Building Waste Tool [BWT]). The PRODCIRO and BWT inform how data, standardisation, consistency, and granularity could streamline and automate the CWQ process. The book also presents the outputs of a test-case building used to validate the adaptability and accuracy of the framework.

This book is a valuable resource for BIM and sustainability practitioners. It provides a comprehensive discussion on the significance of CW, its impacts on sustainability, advancements in CWQ, and data and information gaps within the existing CWQ practices. The solution proposed in the book will help the built environment to shift from reactive to proactive and preventive waste management.

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