Comparative Analysis of Structural Steel and Reinforced Concrete Construction for Sustainable Development
Abstract
Current discussions on Africa’s Development revolves around positioning itself as an
economic hub. Economic report on Africa, 2015 recognizes that there is potential for Africa to
experience greater growth than East Asia countries through industrialization. To aid in this
industrial growth, there needs to be corresponding construction development in industrial
buildings, rail and roads and housing. This development needs to be environmentally, socially,
and economically sustainable.
Choice of building material accounts for over 80% of the Greenhouse gas emissions during
construction. Studies have sought to determine the performance of newer sustainable building
materials like cross-laminated timber, recycled-aggregate concrete, alkali-activated concrete
and concrete with reduced cement quantities and use of limestone powder in greenhouse gas
emission. To do this however, study of conventional construction material has to be done to
determine their contribution to global warming. The study therefore sought to identify the most
economical, environmentally friendly, and least time-consuming material for construction.
The overall objective of the study involved employing structural design principles of a typical
Industrial project to determine the most economical, environmentally friendly and most time
efficient building material.
A cost-benefit analysis, carbon print analysis, and construction time evaluation of structural
steel and reinforced concrete were conducted. A comprehensive design approach was
developed with two designs of the same structure using the two materials. The methodology
had a simple model structure for comparison. It comprised of a portal frame industrial shed of
60m x 20m in plan, and a double volume height of 7.73m. In addition, an overhead crane to
account for abnormal loads was considered. This model structure was large enough to consider
large-span design complexities. Two target construction materials (structural steel and
reinforced concrete) were used to create the model structure. The two design structures were
tested under the same loads. Results showed that embedded carbon for concrete was
149,179.85 KgCo2e/kg, and for steel was 167,193.57 KgCo2e/kg. This study demonstrates that
concrete is sustainable in terms of embedded carbon emissions. Its universality is undisputed,
making it a more sustainable construction material. The bills of quantities show that concrete
construction costs Ksh. 21,542,870.00 while Steel construction costs Ksh. 26,903,320.00. The
difference is Ksh. 5,360,450.00. Concrete construction therefore costs 19.92% lower, making
it cheaper than steel construction.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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