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  • Local variants of global building standards - online version

    Rights statement: This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Faulconbridge, J. and Yalciner, S. (2015), Local variants of mobile sustainable building assessment models: the marketization and constrained mutation of BREEAM ES. Global Networks. doi: 10.1111/glob.12083 which has been published in final form at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/glob.12083/abstract This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance With Wiley Terms and Conditions for self-archiving.

    Accepted author manuscript, 378 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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Local variants of mobile sustainable building assessment models: the marketization and constrained mutation of BREEAM ES

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>2015
<mark>Journal</mark>Global Networks
Issue number3
Volume15
Number of pages19
Pages (from-to)360-378
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date4/06/15
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

The globalization of sustainable building assessment models is now a familiar topic, as are related debates about the degrees of local sensitivity of such models. The contribution of this paper is to examine empirically the way marketization affects the mutation of models as they travel, and the implications of this for local sensitivity. By marketization we mean the effects when both a market for models emerges, and the adoption of a model acts as a means for an organization or city to gain competitive advantage over rivals. Using the case of one sustainable building assessment model, the Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Model (BREEAM), and its movement from the UK to Spain and transformation into BREEAM ES, the paper reveals the important ways that marketization can constrain mutation. Using Callon’s ideas about translation, we show that the model was translated in a way designed to minimize adaptations to local context in order to maximise the comparability of buildings assessed using BREEAM ES with building assessed using other variants of the BREEAM model. This suggests, we claim, that marketization is a significant reason for the outcomes of the mobility of BREEAM being the opposite of that observed in many previous studies where a model’s name stays the same but its content and the practice of implementation varies.

Bibliographic note

Date of Acceptance: 28/04/2015 Acceptance letter is uploaded as document with access to pure backend users only