Skip to main content

2018 | Buch

Design for Environmental Sustainability

Life Cycle Design of Products

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

This book provides a comprehensive framework and practical tools to support environmentally sustainable design processes. It puts forward an articulated vision of methods, tools and strategies for the integration of environmental requirements into product development as part of the circular economy, and highlights potential strategies and design guidelines, accompanied by a large selection of high-quality, environmentally aware product design case studies.

The book is divided into three parts. The first part of the book introduces and defines the outline and scenarios of sustainable development and, within this framework, traces the evolution of sustainability in the design research and practice.

The second part, deals in-depth with the approach and strategies used to design and develop environmentally sustainable products. In particular, this section explains the Life Cycle Design approach, and the strategies and guidelines to minimize material consumption, minimise energy consumption, minimise resource toxicity and harmfulness, optimise resources renewability and bio-compatibility, optimise product lifespan, extend material lifespan and facilitate disassembly. In addition, the offering models in which it becomes very interesting – under an economic and competitive profile – to design products with a low environmental impact are also explained.

The third part presents the environmental impact of products, and the tools and methods for assessing it, with a specific focus on the Life Cycle Assessment together with the tools that have been developed to support product design for environmental sustainability. Finally, we find a description of the Method for Product Design for Environmental Sustainability (MPDS), and the tools that the DIS research unit (Design and system Innovation for Sustainability, Design Department, Politecnico di Milano) adopts when offering consultancy to firms with the aim of paving their way to the development of skills and tools related to the design of environmentally sustainable products.

In the appendix, the design strategies and guidelines are synthetically re-proposed, together with the environmental impact assessment tables.

Extensively rewritten for this new edition, the book is an important text for all students, designers and design engineers interested in product development processes.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Frame of Reference

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Sustainability and Discontinuity
Abstract
In the last years, the concepts of sustainable development and environmental sustainability entered in the international political agenda. By these expressions, we mean the systemic conditions according to which, at a regional and global level, social and production development occurs.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 2. Evolution of Sustainability in Design Research and Practice
Abstract
From the framework highlighted in the previous chapter, a growth of the potential role of design is revealed, because of the growing interest in product and service innovation (not only process anymore), and in the changes in perception of the quality of an offer: its cultural and aesthetic dimension. We will thus see how this growing role really penetrated design research, teaching and practice. To do so, let us try to shed some light on the different dimensions in which the design world has interpreted and developed sustainability.
Carlo Vezzoli

Design for Environmental Sustainability

Frontmatter
Chapter 3. Life Cycle Design
Abstract
The environmental limits show us clearly that not a single design activity can be carried out without taking into consideration the impact a product will have on nature. The environmental requirements should be considered necessary from the very first stage of product development, along with the costs, performance, legal, cultural and aesthetic requirements.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 4. Minimising Material Consumption
Abstract
Minimising material consumption means reducing the material consumption of a certain product; it is better if it is at every life cycle stage and throughout the entire service offered by the product; that is, corresponding to the functional unit. Using up less material diminishes the impact not only because less material/resources are extracted (pre-production), but also because it avoids fewer processing (production), transportation (distribution) and disposal.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 5. Minimising Energy Consumption
Abstract
With reducing energy consumption comes a decrease in the impact, in the sense that less energy needs to be produced, transported and stored. This chapter illustrates with examples the guidelines for minimising energy consumption, considering both the energy required for the production of a product and the energy used by the product, in different phases including pre-production, production and transportation stages. Particular focus will be on the following guidelines.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 6. Minimising Resources Toxicity and Harmfulness
Abstract
Design choices should be aimed at resources (materials and energy sources) with lower impact, while offering equal terms of service or functional unit with the life cycle of a product.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 7. Optimising Resources Renewability and Biocompatibility
Abstract
In the perspective of a sustainable development aimed at safeguarding resources for the future generations, the degree of renewability or, differently phrased, the degree of non-exhaustibility of those resources becomes of great importance.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 8. Product Lifetime Optimisation
Abstract
When speaking about environmental optimisation of a product’s lifetime, two feasible strategies come to mind.
Carlo Arnaldo Vezzoli
Chapter 9. Extending the Lifespan of Materials
Abstract
Extending the lifespan of materials means making them last longer than the products they are part of. This kind of reincarnation of materials can take place through two fundamental processes
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 10. Facilitating Disassembly
Abstract
Design for disassembly (DFD) focuses on how to design easily disassembled products; meaning that the parts and materials can be easily and economically separated.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 11. Constraints and Opportunities for a Product LCD Approach
Abstract
It would be comforting to claim that an approach to product Life Cycle Design (that is, reducing both consumption and emissions/waste) can also have economically sound results. Here, in fact, we would not have to worry, but unfortunately the degradation and increasing risks to our ecosystems prove otherwise.
Carlo Vezzoli

Methods and Support Tools for Environmental Sustainability Analysis and Design

Frontmatter
Chapter 12. Environmental Complexity and Designing Activity
Abstract
In this part, we describe the supporting methods and tools for analysis and design for environmental sustainability.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 13. Estimating the Environmental Impact of Products: Life Cycle Assessment
Abstract
Every human activity determines an uptake and acquisition of natural resources as well as release of different emissions, that is, chemical or physical agents such as various substances, noise, etc.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 14. Environmentally Sustainable Design-Orienting Tools
Abstract
In this chapter, we speak about some tools that have been developed exactly for design process orientation towards environmentally sustainable solutions. These are divided up and described in relationship with two different goals.
Carlo Vezzoli
Chapter 15. The MPDS Method
Abstract
The Design and system Innovation for Sustainability (DIS) research unit of the Design Department at Politecnico di Milano developed a method and some tools to integrate environmental requirements in the product development process.
Carlo Vezzoli
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Design for Environmental Sustainability
verfasst von
Prof. Carlo Arnaldo Vezzoli
Copyright-Jahr
2018
Verlag
Springer London
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4471-7364-9
Print ISBN
978-1-4471-7363-2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-7364-9

    Marktübersichten

    Die im Laufe eines Jahres in der „adhäsion“ veröffentlichten Marktübersichten helfen Anwendern verschiedenster Branchen, sich einen gezielten Überblick über Lieferantenangebote zu verschaffen.