Solid cork building envelope

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Bartlett Sch of Architecture

Abstract

The research team will be involved in each work package, working in close collaboration with the project lead and others, with a focus on environmental design and performance testing. The core research aims to investigate, develop and test the
viability and actual performance of a radically simple building envelope system made almost entirely from solid, loadbearing expanded cork.

The system will include wall and roof elements and will be designed as a prefabricated construction kit to facilitate simple on-site assembly with dry-joints, as well as simple adaptation and disassembly for re-use or recycling at the end of the building life.

Supporting research will evaluate whole-life performance, utilizing Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) modelling - from the origins of the cork in biodiverse forests, to an embodied carbon-negative product, to solid building envelope helping to
deliver a well-insulated, low-energy and healthy indoor environment, and on to eventual disassembly and reuse. The inhabited Cork House will be monitored and energy use, etc. data collected as part of a Post-Occupancy Evaluation. This
will provide evidence of actual environmental and energy performance, and this data will also be used in the LCA modeling.

The essential simplicity of the proposed system aims to eliminate the complexity of the typical multi-layered building envelope and the building whole-life performance problems often associated with this:

- Excessive building design costs due to the time needed to design numerous complex, bespoke interfaces between dissimilar components and systems.

- Excessive expense and construction period and increased risk of delay and unforeseen cost due to the need for many trades to contribute to envelope construction in prescribed sequences.
- The malperformance of the building envelope due to aggregate performance of the many layers and components not being as predicted. For example, poor airtightness due to differing tolerances and interfaces between components or the degradation of the envelope over time due to the dissimilar thermal expansion or vapour permeability of components.
- Limited adaptability due to the cost and challenge of modifying and interfacing with complex envelope assemblies.
- Destructive demolition at the end of the building life degrading resources due to deconstruction for re-use being unaffordably time-consuming and many components being unrecoverable due to the original method of assembly.

The project would conclude with research on the commercial viability of the building system, including its potential adaptation in response to market opportunities. It is anticipated that the proposed system would be applicable to housing, self-build, rooftop development, and types of ancillary accommodation.

Planned Impact

Benefits to the construction industry, its clients and building owners will include gaining knowledge of a simple biogenic form of construction that will meet regulatory requirements and bring substantial building whole life performance benefits, including reducing environmental impacts and costs without reducing building quality or erformance. Building contractors and building design teams may benefit from competitive advantage where they have knowledge of this approach and can
articulate and implement it.

Benefits to policy makers (at national and local level) will be gained from knowledge of the system developed, evidence of actual performance and a clear explanation of associated whole-life benefits and any dis-benefits associated with using this
and possibly other simple forms of biogenic construction. This may then inform what they choose to advocate or legislate for which would create broader impacts.

The research and the associated construction system that will be developed has the potential to contribute to the nation's health, wealth and culture, and also reduce environmental impacts as follows:
- It will enable the creation of buildings with a healthy internal environment, including good indoor air quality.
- It will increase the manufacture of building components in the UK, creating jobs and decreasing imports. Longer-term benefits will arise at the end of life of buildings using the developed system when components can be re-used.
- It will contribute to design culture in the UK by enabling the design of simple buildings whose form is reflective of the form of construction use, in a similar way to historic solid-wall buildings such as the Regency Town House, but in a way that meets current thermal and other building performance requirements.
- It will enable the lowering of environmental impacts associated with the UK built environment by enabling construction of
buildings with low embodied impacts (cork is a sustainable resource that sequesters CO2 for its lifetime) that are healthy to inhabit and low energy in use (due to low u-value) and also simple to deconstruct at the end of building life to re-use the components.

Publications

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Wilton OJ (2020) Cork Construction Kit in The Journal of Architecture

 
Title Cork Cabin 
Description The Cork Cabin is a small cork building that uses the solid cork construction system developed under the research project. It has primarily been produced to test the cork construction system assembly method and its performance under real life conditions, to supplement the laboratory testing being undertaken. It is also a creative product in its own right. 
Type Of Art Artefact (including digital) 
Year Produced 2017 
Impact The Cork Cabin has been visited by a range of parties including postgraduate architecture students from London Metropolitan University and 6th form students from Windsor Girls School. It has also featured in a number of talks on the research project. 
 
Description The research project team has successfully researched and developed a viable new form of structural cork construction which is dry assembled on site with no need for falsework, and designed for simple disassembly at end of life. Diverse research work contributing to this has included design hypothesis and development, scale modelling, developing a robotic milling method to shape the cork blocks, and laboratory testing of the structural, fire and water tightness performance of the blocks and system under development.

We have designed, fabricated and assembled the Cork Cabin prototype building using the new structural cork construction system. This has been monitored to ascertain real world performance through the seasons and as a result of analysis of the monitoring results we have further developed the building system design.

An evolved version of the cork building system has been utilised in the Cork House, architectural design by Matthew Barnett Howland with Dido Milne and Oliver Wilton. This is the first permanent structural cork house in the world and has been designed to fully meet UK Building Regulations. A whole life carbon assessment of the house conducted by Sturgis Carbon Consulting indicates that the house has exceptionally low whole life carbon, below half that of the reference Passivhaus to which it was compared, with negative embodied carbon at completion due to carbon sequestration in the cork and timber building fabric. A post-occupancy evaluation of the house will commence shortly.
Exploitation Route The cork building system that we have developed has a broad range of applicabilities and can be utilised by the commercial partners involved in the research project and by others. The work demonstrates a radically simple form of biogenic construction which can be used in buildings to meet or exceed UK statutory requirements. There is great potential for further work in this field, in order to evolve construction in the UK and beyond. This can contribute to making the industry more environmentally sustainable, and to making simpler buildings with better whole life performance via simpler procurement and construction processes.
Sectors Construction,Creative Economy,Education,Environment,Healthcare,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL https://doi.org/10.1080/13602365.2020.1733812
 
Description The research contributed to the development of the Cork Construction Kit and Cork House which has received significant interest , awards and dissemination beyond academia. dissemination includes features in the Financial Times, The Times, The Observer, Frankfurter Allgemeine, La Repubblica, L'Architecture d'Aujourd'hui, Country Life, Architecture Today, Architect's Journal, RIBA Journal, Icon, Grand Designs House of the Year, BBC News, ITV News, and Reuters. Cork House features as an exemplary case study for sustainable building in the UIA's guidebook An Architecture Guide to the UN17 Sustainable Development Goals (2018). It is discussed in several other books educating on environmental sustainability, including Barnabus Calder's Architecture: Buildings and Energy from Prehistory to the Present, published by Pelican (2021). Work related to the research has featured in several exhibitions including Waste Age 21/22 at the Design Museum and the 2020 Summer Show at the Royal Academy.
First Year Of Impact 2019
Sector Construction,Creative Economy,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation Amorim (UK) Ltd
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation Arup Group
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation MPH Architects
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation Sturgis Carbon Profiling LLP
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation Ty-mawr Lime Ltd
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Solid cork building envelope 
Organisation University of Bath
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Environmental design and research, risk management, fabrication research and development, and fabrication. Contribution to a range of activities including broader system and architectural design, project management. system assembly for prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings, dissemination of key findings and exploitation planning.
Collaborator Contribution MPH Architects are the industry lead, undertaking project management, design and a range of further activities. Amorim (UK) Ltd are supplying expanded cork and advice on its manufacture, characteristics and past applications. Arup are undertaking the structural design of the prototype Cork Cabin and Cork House buildings and advising on timber. Sturgis Carbon Profiling are undertaking a Whole Life Carbon Assessment of the Cork House prototype building. Ty-Mawr Lime Ltd are undertaking market appraisal, research on possible uses for cork particles (produced as a bi-product of the fabrication process) and contributing to exploitation planning. University of Bath are characterising the mechanical properties of the prototype cork products and monitoring the environmental performance of the prototype building.
Impact The project is still on-going. Outputs and outcomes include research, development and testing of the structural cork construction system, creation of the Cork Cabin prototype building and modelling and post-occupancy monitoring of its performance, market engagement at Timber Expo 2017 and presenting some key findings of the research at Innovation in Biogenic Building, an ASBP/UCL event in March 2018.
Start Year 2015
 
Description Innovations in Biogenic Building event, 01 March 2018, cohosted by ASBP and UCL 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact The Innovations in Biogenic Building event was organised to disseminate key findings to date from the research project. It was chaired by UCL Visiting Professor Bill Watts and included 3 talks by contributors to the research project and a panel debate. One of the talks was Solid Cork Building by Mathew Barnett Howland of MPH Architects and Oliver Wilton of UCL, addressing the research project.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL https://asbp.org.uk/events/innovations-biogenic-building
 
Description Research presented as a part of 'Long Life, Low Energy: Designing for a Circular Economy' exhibition at RIBA, London. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Research and related Cork House included in RIBA exhibition.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.architecture.com/knowledge-and-resources/knowledge-landing-page/riba-tackles-material-wa...
 
Description Research presented as a part of 'Waste age: What Can Design Do?' exhibition at Design Museum, London. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Presentation of. research and associated Cork House at Design Museum exhibition.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
URL https://designmuseum.org/exhibitions/waste-age-what-can-design-do
 
Description Timber Expo 2017 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Presence at Ty Mawr trade stand, to disseminate certain aspects of the research project, and also to canvass the views of some attendees on matters relating to the cork construction system developed under the research project.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017