@article { , title = {Managing embodied carbon in buildings: a pareto approach.}, abstract = {Purpose: The aim of this paper is to identify the carbon intensive building elements or 'carbon hotspots' of office buildings in order to maximize the carbon reduction potential during design stages. Design/methodology/approach: Embodied carbon estimates of 28 office buildings in the UK were obtained and carbon hotspots of the samble (in accordance with NRM element classification) were identified using the 80:20 Pareto Principle. Findings: Frame, Substructure, External walls, Services and Upper Floors were identified as a carbon hotspots of the selected sample. However, findings do not support the 80:20 ratio in this case but propose a ratio of 80:36. Stairs, Internal Walls and partitions, Internal Doors, Wall Finishes, Ceiling Finishes and Fittings and Furnishings were identified as carbon insignificant elements that have a lower EC reduction potential compared to the rest. Originality/value: Findings unveil carbon intensive and carbon insignificant building elements of typical office buildings in the UK. This informs designers of the elements that could yield the highest potential embodied carbon savings via effective design choices. In addition, a logical design timeline is proposed for building elements based on their element hotspot category and design sequence to assist design decision making.}, doi = {10.1108/BEPAM-10-2017-0095}, eissn = {2044-1258}, issn = {2044-124X}, issue = {5}, journal = {Built environment project and asset management}, note = {UPLOADED - PENDING -- Still on Earlycite 11/10/2018 -- Now on Earlycite 21/8/2018, 14/8/2018 LM -- Still not on journal website 30/7/2018 LM -- Asked contact to forward Emerald acceptance email but on A/L till 1st August 3/7/2018 LM -- Info via contact 2/7/2018 LM ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Victoria, Michele -- Panel C}, pages = {504-514}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Emerald}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10059/2986}, volume = {8}, keyword = {Carbon hotspots, Carbon hotspots probability, Embodied carbon, Office buildings, Pareto principle}, year = {2018}, author = {Victoria, Michele Florencia and Perera, Srinath} }