The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects

Renovation and refurbishment of the existingcommercial building stock is a growing area oftotal construction activity and a significantgenerator of waste sent to landfill in Australia. Awritten waste management plan (WMP) is awidespread regulatory requirement forcommercial office redevelopment proje...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mary Hardie, Shahed Khan, Angela O'Donnell, Graham Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2012-11-01
Series:Australasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building
Online Access:https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2988
id doaj-ac7fb15c9f73431aafeb8c015c0ec53f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ac7fb15c9f73431aafeb8c015c0ec53f2020-11-24T22:37:17ZengUTS ePRESSAustralasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building1835-63541837-91332012-11-0172263610.5130/ajceb.v7i2.29881952The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment ProjectsMary Hardie0Shahed Khan1Angela O'Donnell2Graham MillerUniversity of Western SydneyUniversity of Western SydneyUniversity of Western SydneyRenovation and refurbishment of the existingcommercial building stock is a growing area oftotal construction activity and a significantgenerator of waste sent to landfill in Australia. Awritten waste management plan (WMP) is awidespread regulatory requirement forcommercial office redevelopment projects. Thereis little evidence, however, that WMPs actuallyincrease the quantity of waste that is ultimatelydiverted from landfill. Some reports indicate anabsence of any formal verification or monitoringprocess by regulators to assess the efficacy ofthe plans. In order to gauge the extent of theproblem a survey was conducted of twenty fourconsultants and practitioners involved incommercial office building refurbishment projectsto determine the state of current practice withregard to WMPs and to elicit suggestions withregard to ways of making the process moreeffective. Considerable variation in commitmentto recycling policies was encountered indicatinga need to revisit waste minimisation practices ifthe environmental performance of refurbishmentprojects is to be improved.https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2988
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mary Hardie
Shahed Khan
Angela O'Donnell
Graham Miller
spellingShingle Mary Hardie
Shahed Khan
Angela O'Donnell
Graham Miller
The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
Australasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building
author_facet Mary Hardie
Shahed Khan
Angela O'Donnell
Graham Miller
author_sort Mary Hardie
title The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
title_short The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
title_full The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
title_fullStr The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
title_full_unstemmed The Efficacy of Waste Management Plans in Australian Commercial Construction Refurbishment Projects
title_sort efficacy of waste management plans in australian commercial construction refurbishment projects
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Australasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building
issn 1835-6354
1837-9133
publishDate 2012-11-01
description Renovation and refurbishment of the existingcommercial building stock is a growing area oftotal construction activity and a significantgenerator of waste sent to landfill in Australia. Awritten waste management plan (WMP) is awidespread regulatory requirement forcommercial office redevelopment projects. Thereis little evidence, however, that WMPs actuallyincrease the quantity of waste that is ultimatelydiverted from landfill. Some reports indicate anabsence of any formal verification or monitoringprocess by regulators to assess the efficacy ofthe plans. In order to gauge the extent of theproblem a survey was conducted of twenty fourconsultants and practitioners involved incommercial office building refurbishment projectsto determine the state of current practice withregard to WMPs and to elicit suggestions withregard to ways of making the process moreeffective. Considerable variation in commitmentto recycling policies was encountered indicatinga need to revisit waste minimisation practices ifthe environmental performance of refurbishmentprojects is to be improved.
url https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2988
work_keys_str_mv AT maryhardie theefficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT shahedkhan theefficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT angelaodonnell theefficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT grahammiller theefficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT maryhardie efficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT shahedkhan efficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT angelaodonnell efficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
AT grahammiller efficacyofwastemanagementplansinaustraliancommercialconstructionrefurbishmentprojects
_version_ 1725717731658956800