Nordic Policy Blueprint Shows Renovation Beats Demolition for Climate Goals
A new catalogue of Nordic policy measures demonstrates that retrofitting and adapting existing buildings is more resource-efficient and scalable than demolition and new construction. The findings could reshape how governments and real estate sectors approach sustainability, offering proven regulatory tools to shift investment toward renovation rather than development.
Originaltitel: Inspiration Catalogue for Policy Measures to Improve the Use of Existing Buildings
<p>The inspiration catalogue is prepared by the Nordic Sustainable Construction in relation to the Circularity Work Package focusing on floor area optimisation, lifetime extension and transformation.</p><p> It provides examples on policy measures across the Nordic region that are introduced or can be used to improve the use of existing buildings rather than demolishing and building new.</p><p> Building on the hierarchy of resource-efficient construction guiding whether to utilise, maintain, renovate and transform, extend lifetime or build new, the catalogue suggests five action to guide policymakers and authorities to enhance sustainability, adaptability and efficiency when working with existing buildings.</p><p> The examples show that renovation, reuse and adaptation are viable and scalable alternatives to demolition and new construction and leads a more resource efficient and climate-conscious sector.</p>