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Movement joints in buildings are essential design elements that accommodate inevitable motions caused by various factors such as temperature changes, moisture content variations, and structural deflections. These motions, if not considered in design and construction, can lead to unsightly or dangerous damage. Movement joints are incorporated in different forms to manage these stresses and allow materials to move without causing distress.
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Building Evidence for Health: Green Buildings, Current Science, and Future Challenges.

J G Cedeño-Laurent1, A Williams1, P MacNaughton1

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Annual Review of Public Health
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PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Green buildings offer healthier indoor environments, a key benefit beyond energy savings. Prioritizing indoor environmental quality can transform green buildings into powerful public health tools.

Keywords:
built environmentgreen buildingshealthhuman rightsindoor environmental qualitysustainability

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Area of Science:

  • Environmental Science
  • Public Health
  • Sustainable Architecture

Background:

  • Civilizational challenges necessitate a reevaluation of human consumption patterns, particularly in the built environment.
  • Green buildings represent a response to these challenges, yet their benefits are not widely accessible.
  • The potential of green buildings extends beyond energy efficiency and market value to encompass healthier indoor environments.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To highlight the public health potential of green buildings by focusing on indoor environmental quality.
  • To summarize nine foundational elements of indoor environmental quality crucial for human health, based on 40 years of research.
  • To propose green buildings as a research platform within a social-environmental capital framework for sustainability.

Main Methods:

  • Review and synthesis of 40 years of research on indoor environmental quality.
  • Identification of nine key environmental elements essential for human health.
  • Conceptualization of a novel sustainability framework integrating social-environmental capital assets.

Main Results:

  • Green buildings offer significant potential for improving human health through enhanced indoor environments.
  • Nine specific indoor environmental elements are identified as critical for human health.
  • A framework is proposed where green buildings serve as research platforms for sustainability.

Conclusions:

  • The green building movement can achieve its full potential as a public health tool by prioritizing indoor environmental quality.
  • Focusing on the right to healthy indoor environments is crucial for broader societal benefit.
  • Green buildings can be instrumental in advancing a sustainability framework based on social-environmental capital.