| dc.description.abstract | The trend of urbanization and population growth has exerted excessive
pressure on natural capital, with scientific evidence showing an
overshoot beyond sustainable limits. Ensuring ecologically sustainable
cities and metropolitan regions with a high quality of life is a prime
development goal, in Kenya and worldwide. The proportional
contribution of the construction sector to environmental degradation
has been estimated at a global average of 30 per cent to 40 per cent.
This study reviewed existing best practices, conceptual frameworks,
and empirical evidence of the benefits of environmentally sound and
sustainable building and construction. It applied a weighted summation
model and additive utility concepts in Multi-Criteria Decision-Making
(MCDM) to analyze the views of Kenyan stakeholders on the relative
importance of nine selected environmental criteria and ten commonly
applied strategies for environmentally sustainable building and
construction. Slum upgrading, regeneration of brown fields, the 3R
philosophy of waste re-use, recycling and reduction, and harmonizing
new construction developments with neighbourhoods emerged the
four leading strategies in environmental sustainability in the urban
building and construction sector. Health and safety, and air quality were
the criteria most highly ranked by the stakeholders. Ecology received
a uniform weight as an important criterion. Noise pollution, energy
efficiency, and air quality emerged to be the factors impacted on least
by a combination of all the strategies considered. In Kenya's scenario,
the results implied a greater need for participatory development of
policy and technology for sustainable urban built environment, and
ensuring strict implementation of spatial planning and environmental
policy agenda, economic incentives that can motivate research, and
innovative measures to achieve high environmental standards, by
particularly improving strategic performance on the criteria of noise
pollution, air quality, and energy efficiency. Policy recommendations
focus on facilitating the four identified leading strategies and role of
education in increasing environmental awareness and efficiency in the
management of water, waste, and energy in building and construction
activities. | en |