This research explores principles and strategies for designing residential buildings that can adapt to changing needs over time. The authors propose an Agility framework that includes a three-step Design Toolkit.
This research proposes a multi-criteria decision-making framework for designing flexible and sustainable buildings. The framework incorporates physical, functional, economic, technological, social, legal, and political facets that contribute to building agility.
This research proposes re-conceptualizing buildings as constantly evolving socialized products, and provides a framework for designing buildings that are both sustainable and responsive to future uncertainties.
This research assesses the current state of architecture and proposes an integrative model that emphasizes agility and sustainability to address the unprecedented and accelerating trends in urbanization, political instability, climate change, and technological transformation.
In this research, we investigate for the first time whether part of the building energy performance gap might be caused by the modelling literacy of design teams.