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Environmental benchmarking of Hong Kong buildings

journal contribution
posted on 2001-01-01, 00:00 authored by Hilary Davies
A method for assessing the environmental performance of Hong Kong’s buildings has been developed, known as the Hong Kong Building Environmental Assessment Method or HK-BEAM. The assessment is a type of expert-based survey, either of the design, in the case of proposed buildings, or an evaluation of building performance for newly built or existing buildings. The assessment essentially provides a benchmark of environmental performance against a series of qualitative and quantitative measures that earn “credits”. Buildings can be rated as “excellent”, “very good”, “good” or “fair”. The assessment covers global, local and indoor issues. The original assessment has been in use since 1996 and allowed appraisal of new and existing air-conditioned offices. A new version has been recently produced for residential buildings. The latest version has addressed some of the criticisms of the earlier versions and covers a wider range of issues, taking a life-cycle approach. Reviews the latest new residential version, making comparisons with the earlier new offices scheme.

History

Journal

Structural survey

Volume

19

Issue

1

Pagination

38 - 45

Publisher

Henry Stewart Publications

Location

London, England

ISSN

0263-080X

eISSN

1758-6844

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Henry Stewart Publications

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