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Featured researches published by Ricardo Mateus.


Environment, Development and Sustainability | 2015

A critical analysis of building sustainability assessment methods for healthcare buildings

Maria de Fátima Morais de Aguiar e Castro; Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança

The healthcare building project contains different aspects from the most common projects. Designing a healthcare environment is based on a number of criteria related to the satisfaction and well-being of the professional working teams, patients and administrators. Mostly due to various design requirements, these buildings are rarely designed and operated in a sustainable way. Therefore, the sustainable development is a concept whose importance has grown significantly in the last decade in this sector. The worldwide economic crisis reinforces the growing environmental concerns as well as raising awareness among people to a necessary and inevitable shift in the values of their society. To support sustainable building design, several building sustainability assessment (BSA) methods are being developed worldwide. Since healthcare buildings are rather complex systems than other buildings, so specific methods were developed for them. These methods are aimed to support decision-making towards the introduction of the best sustainability practices during the design and operation phases of a healthcare environment. However, the comparison between the results of different methods is difficult, if not impossible, since they address different environmental, societal and economic criteria, and they emphasize different phases of the life cycle. Therefore, the aim of this study was to clarify the differences between the main BSA methods for healthcare buildings by analysing and categorizing them. Furthermore, the benefits of these methods in promoting a more sustainable environment will be analysed, and the current situation of them within the context of standardization of the concept sustainable construction will be discussed.


Journal of Urban Planning and Development-asce | 2015

Assessment of land use efficiency using BSA tools : development of a new index

José Amarilio Barbosa; L. Bragança; Ricardo Mateus

AbstractIn this article, the sustainability assessment of land use efficiency of buildings is subject to a critical study. Several building sustainability assessment (BSA) tools were analyzed, finding that the impacts of this criterion are not correctly assessed in current methodologies and some even ignore its importance. Some existing assessment methods and corresponding indexes were used in four virtual buildings to evaluate the effectiveness of each calculation method. It was concluded that the existing methods do not provide correct assessments and can promote unsustainable practices. It was also proved that it is necessary to include the implantation index, spatial efficiency, and occupational efficiency for correct assessments complementary to the use of the gross floor area index or development density. Due to difficulties in the weighting of the four complementary indexes, a single index was developed to perform the calculations using five main variables. The new index was tested in seven virtual...


Architectural Science Review | 2015

Portuguese vernacular architecture: the contribution of vernacular materials and design approaches for sustainable construction

Jorge Fernandes; Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança; José Júlio Correia da Silva

Vernacular architecture is characterized by a type of formal expression, which has been developed in response to a number of factors – geographic, climatic and economic – characterizing the local area or region. Despite the fact that Portugal is a small country, there are many different architectural approaches and a range of techniques have been employed in different regions to mitigate the effects of climate. These vernacular approaches have the potential for further development and could be adapted in response to contemporary needs. In this paper, a range of different passive solar techniques used in Portuguese vernacular architecture to provide comfort is presented. The specific focus is on the effectiveness of passive cooling strategies (namely, high thermal inertia, use of light colours and courtyards), and the findings of a case study in which the thermal performance during the summer of a vernacular residential building located in the south of Portugal are presented.


International Journal of Sustainable Building Technology and Urban Development | 2013

Adaptation of SBToolPT to office buildings

José Amarilio Barbosa; Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança

The few available sustainability assessment tools applicable in Portugal are oriented for residential buildings. Nevertheless, the impacts of office buildings have been rising mainly due to an increase in the energy consumption for cooling and heating. This way, due to the growing environmental impact of office buildings, the development of Building Sustainability Assessment (BSA) tools to assess the sustainability of this type of buildings is necessary and important to guide and to boost the construction sector towards sustainable development. The main objective of this work was to develop a sustainability assessment tool aimed at office buildings based in SBToolPT-H. The work includes the definition of the tools framework and assessment method, as well as the Portuguese benchmarks and weighting system used in the aggregation. In order to promote the practical use of this tool, an evaluation guide was also developed in which there is detailed information about calculation methods and aggregation models....


International Journal of Sustainable Building Technology and Urban Development | 2012

Designing an affordable sustainable residential building block using the SBToolPT sustainability rating system

Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança

This research work aims to study if it is possible to design a sustainable building residential building that has a life-cycle cost lower than a conventional one. For this purpose, a multifamily cooperative housing building block, that is the Portuguese pilot-project of the EU Project “SHE: Sustainable Housing in Europe”, has been chosen. This work will compare the sustainability of the case study with the conventional design approach in Portugal, i.e. when the conventional technologies and building materials are used. For this outcome, the SBToolPT-H (Portuguese building sustainability assessment and rating methodology) will be used. This paper will highlight the usefulness of a building sustainability assessment tool in supporting and recognising the sustainable building design. It will also show that even with little investment in the capital costs it is possible to achieve high performance residential buildings.


Architectural Engineering and Design Management | 2016

Smart interior design of buildings and its relationship to land use

José Amarilio Barbosa; Catarina Araújo; Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança

ABSTRACT Architectural design is often associated with aesthetics and style, but it is also very important to building performance and sustainability. There are some studies associating architectural design to the choice for materials from sustainable sources, to indoor air quality, to energy efficiency and productivity. This article takes a step further to analyse how the use of efficient interior design techniques can impact the habitable space in order to improve building sustainability in land use. Smart interior design, a current trend related to the use of efficient and flexible furniture and movable walls in tiny or compact apartments, is analysed. A building with a standard design is used as a case study reference building and compared to a proposed theoretical design alternative using smart interior design techniques. In order to correctly assess sustainability performance, a quantifiable and verified method is used. Results showed that the use of smart interior design techniques can greatly reduce buildings’ impact on the environment.


International Journal of Sustainable Building Technology and Urban Development | 2014

New approach addressing sustainability in urban areas using sustainable city models

José Amarilio Barbosa; L. Bragança; Ricardo Mateus

A brief analysis of the environmental, social and economic paradigm of todays cities, allows a simple conclusion to be reached: current cities are not sustainable. Considering this, it is very important to study the causes of city problems and to develop city models implementing sustainability practices. There are a limited number of studies developing sustainable city models, but in the scientific community there is an even greater lack of studies about the rehabilitation of current cities to implement these models. This work emerges with the objective of analysing how it is possible to implement sustainability practices in cities through the development of a sustainable city model and an urban rehabilitation plan. The development of sustainable city models is a very complex topic and the analysis of the literature shows that it is necessary to consider the relation between environmental and social aspects in the development of sustainable cities, while taking special care when considering the economic ...


euro-mediterranean conference | 2018

Comparative Analysis of Inspection and Diagnosis Tools for Ancient Buildings

Joana Gonçalves; Ricardo Mateus; José Dinis Silvestre

The survey and inspection of the state of conservation of buildings is understood as an active process of selecting information to support decision making in the rehabilitation of the built heritage. The development of new technologies applied to the integrated management of the built heritage resulted in digital tools able to support the technicians in on-site procedures. The purpose of this study was to analyse existing methods for the survey and inspection of the state of conservation of ancient buildings. It uses a qualitative methodology, focused on bibliographical survey and comparative analysis. Only methods with identical characteristics were considered: evaluation based on visual inspection of buildings with heritage value. This research shows that structuring information in computer systems is a solution to overcome the main problems pointed out in previous studies related to survey and inspection: expensive, time-consuming, inconsequential procedures and dispersed information. However, this is only valid if computer-based methods are adapted to the different geographic and chronological contexts. Future research may contribute to the development of a method that brings together this added value with a simple but objective way to diagnose the condition of ancient buildings with heritage value.


International Journal of Sustainable Building Technology and Urban Development | 2016

Life-cycle costs and impacts on energy-related building renovation assessments

Manuela Guedes de Almeida; Ricardo Mateus; Marco António Pedrosa Santos Ferreira; Ana Rodrigues

AbstractMany regulations and initiatives to promote the reduction of energy consumption and carbon emissions have been implemented in the building sector. However, they are mostly targeted at new buildings. In order to reach the goals that are being established, while it is necessary to implement measures in new buildings, this is doubly the case for existing buildings, which correspond to the majority of the European building stock. Building renovation improves buildings’ energy performance and reduces the carbon emissions related to the operation of the building, but this involves adding new materials and technical systems. The production process of these new materials uses energy (embodied energy) and releases carbon emissions. In this sense, to evaluate the relevance of the embodied energy in building renovation, the International Energy Agency Energy in Buildings and Communities (IEA EBC) project, Annex 56, developed a methodological framework to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of building renovation...


Euro-ELECS 2015 - 1st Latin-American and European Conference on Sustainable Buildings and Communities | 2015

Assessment of the Effects of the Expansion of the City of Estarreja on the Rational Land Use

Francisco Serôdio; Jorge Emanuel Pereira Fernandes; Ricardo Mateus; L. Bragança

The management of urban environment, together with the preservation of the natural environment and the creation of a sustainable built environment, is a complex challenge for contemporary societies. In the name of progress, cities are contributing for the degradation of all surrounding ecosystems. Therefore there is an arising demand for developing new strategies and a new urban development paradigm settled in the search for the equilibrium between natural and built environments and efficient use of resources. The objective of this paper is to analyse how the urban expansion of the city of Estarreja took place in relation to the land use, based on the land capability classification maps of the area. Based in the results some sustainable development strategies that might be applied to the city are discussed. The obtained results demonstrate that the city has been growing faster than its population, consuming vast portions of land, since its growth has been occurring in a linear form. Despite this fact, results show that most of this expansion took place towards a territory of lower agricultural potential, when comparing to the location of its original settlement.

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Heli Koukkari

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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