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Reviewing the contribution of retrofitting for climate resilience in residential buildings

journal contribution
posted on 2023-12-01, 02:49 authored by ND Hulathdoowage, Gayani KarunasenaGayani Karunasena, Nilupa UdawattaNilupa Udawatta, Chunlu LiuChunlu Liu
Purpose: Over the years, the significance of retrofitting has gained much attention with the unveiling of its different applications, such as energy retrofit and deep retrofit, to enhance the climate-resilience of buildings. However, no single study comprehensively assesses the climate-resilience of retrofitting. The purpose of this study is to address this gap via a systematic literature review. Design/methodology/approach: Quality journal studies were selected using the PRISMA method and analysed manually and using scientometrics. Three dimensions of climate-resilience, such as robustness, withstanding and recovery, were used to evaluate the contribution of retrofit measures for achieving climate-resilient houses across four climate zones: tropical, arid, temperate and cold. Findings: Most passive measures can enhance the robustness of residential buildings but cannot verify for withstanding against immediate shocks and timely recovery. However, some passive measures, such as night-time ventilation, show excellent performance over all four climate zones. Active measures such as heating, ventilation and air conditioning and mechanical ventilation with heat recovery, can ensure climate-resilience in all three dimensions in the short-term but contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, further exacerbating the long-term climate. Integrating renewable energy sources can defeat this issue. Thus, all three retrofit strategies should appropriately be adopted together to achieve climate-resilient houses. Research limitations/implications: Since the research is limited to secondary data, retrofit measures recommended in this research should be further investigated before application. Originality/value: This review contributes to the knowledge domain of retrofitting by assessing the contribution of different retrofit measures to climate-resilience.

History

Journal

International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment

Volume

ahead-of-print

ISSN

1759-5908

eISSN

1759-5916

Language

en

Issue

ahead-of-print

Publisher

Emerald

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