Designing for resilience: Modular timber schools for circular construction

Antiopi Koronaki, Kirsten Haggart, Simon Smith, S. Dario Marino, Darshil U. Shah, Dr Ana Gatóo, Yelda Gin, Harry Mills, Eduardo Wiegand and Michael H. Ramage 2025. Designing for resilience: Modular timber schools for circular construction. Structures. 78 109041. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.istruc.2025.109041

TitleDesigning for resilience: Modular timber schools for circular construction
TypeJournal article
AuthorsAntiopi Koronaki
Kirsten Haggart
Simon Smith
S. Dario Marino
Darshil U. Shah
Dr Ana Gatóo
Yelda Gin
Harry Mills
Eduardo Wiegand
Michael H. Ramage
Abstract

With the construction industry responsible for 37% of global greenhouse gas emissions, natural construction materials are key for the decarbonisation of the built environment. This research proposes the use of UK timber products to address school shortages through resource-efficient design and prefabrication. Building on previous government programmes, a novel design and construction system for modular, fully-demountable timber schools is proposed, the New Model School. A performance-driven design approach is followed, that simultaneously optimises material efficiency, embodied carbon, and biophilic and circularity principles. An extension to a primary school building in Cambridge, UK, is designed as a case study using homegrown timber. The results demonstrate that significant reductions in material and embodied carbon can be achieved, when compared to current practices — up to 70% per unit area. The dry construction system promotes circularity, with building components being fully-demountable and reusable. Deploying our proposal at scale would enable the UK to address school shortages on-time, using homegrown timber. Moreover, the system’s standardisation and modularity render it applicable to other programmes and regions. This research therefore proposes a new design and fabrication framework to address infrastructure shortages, promote natural construction materials and create healthy environments, while meeting environmental targets.

Article number109041
JournalStructures
Journal citation78
ISSN2352-0124
Year2025
PublisherElsevier
Publisher's version
License
CC BY 4.0
File Access Level
Open (open metadata and files)
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.istruc.2025.109041
Web address (URL)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.istruc.2025.109041
Publication dates
Published in printAug 2025
Published online23 May 2025

Related outputs

Ephemeral: natural, flexible living
Gatóo, A., Ramage, M.H. and Bakker, R. 2024. Ephemeral: natural, flexible living. Earth and Environmental Science. 1402 012035. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1402/1/012035

Design Practices
Mr Wilfred Achille, Ayuso, A., Batty, S., Boulanger, A., Cascone, P., Durelle, K., Dr Ana Gatóo, Girardin, F., Golzari, N., Guibert, E., Kramer, M., Maragiannis, A., McLean, W., Nieva Mesas, G., Pollock, B., Zaide, P., Zhang, J., Sharif, Y., Silver, P., Urna Sodnomjamts, Tankard, J., Thwaites, A., Watson, V.A. and Wilkinson, C. Watson, V.A., McLean, W. and Urna Sodnomjamts (ed.) 2024. Design Practices. University of Westminster DPRG Publications.

Utopia by Design. Contemporary opportunities for a timeless ideal
Gatóo, A., Jalia, A., Koronaki, A. and Ramage, M.H. 2023. Utopia by Design. Contemporary opportunities for a timeless ideal. Science Talks https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sctalk.2023.100236

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