
The conference topic is “Shaping Tomorrow: Systems Thinking in the Built Environment” and it will address the following main themes:
- Integrated energy and resource use from buildings to territories
- Digital transformation for a systemic shift from a linear to a circular economy
- Economic models for a fast and efficient implementation of regenerative solutions
- Synergies of sustainable systems between environment, society, and economy
Releasing over 40% of global greenhouse gas emissions and consuming over 40% of primary resources, the built environment needs an urgent transformation towards climate neutrality and circularity while hosting a booming humanity in dignified conditions under climate change. Optimising individual solutions will not be sufficient to overcome these challenges. Instead, we must adopt systems thinking, which allows us to explore synergies and balance trade-offs between different building functions (safety, comfort, health, among others), scales (materials, components, buildings, cities, planet), sectors (industry, agriculture, energy, among others) and domains (economy, society, ecology).
Date:
25/6/2025 - 27/6/2025
Type:
Congresso
Organisation:
ETH Zurich | Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering | Institute of Construction & Infrastructure Management (IBI) | Chair of Sustainable Construction & Chair of Circular Engineering for Architecture, ETH Zurich | Department of Architecture | Chair of Architecture and Building Systems, Graz University of Technology | Institute of Structural Design , Karlsruhe Institute of Technology | Institute for Industrial Production | Former Chair for Sustainable Management of Housing and Real Estate, University of Liechtenstein | Chair of Urbanism, Architecture & Society
Location:
ETHZ Campus Hoenggerberg, Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5, 8049 Zurich