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Integrated Life Cycle Assessment of Residential Retrofit Strategies: Balancing Operational and Embodied Carbon, Lessons from an Irish Housing Case Study

Aghamolaei, Reihaneh orcid logoORCID: 0000-0002-5655-100X, Taherpour, Paria, Saeedian, Afshin and Nolan, Thomas (2025) Integrated Life Cycle Assessment of Residential Retrofit Strategies: Balancing Operational and Embodied Carbon, Lessons from an Irish Housing Case Study. Sustainability Journal, 17 . p. 8173. ISSN 2998-808X

Abstract
The residential building sector is a major contributor to global energy consumption and carbon emissions, making retrofit strategies essential for meeting climate targets. While many studies focus on reducing operational energy, few comprehensively evaluate the trade-offs between operational savings and the embodied carbon introduced by retrofit measures. This study addresses this gap by developing an integrated, novel scenario-based assessment framework that combines dynamic energy simulation and life cycle assessment (LCA) to quantify whole life carbon impacts. Applied to representative Irish housing typologies, the framework evaluates thirty retrofit scenarios across three intervention levels: original fabric, shallow retrofit, and deep retrofit incorporating multiple HVAC technologies and envelope upgrades. Results reveal that while deep retrofits deliver up to 80.2% operational carbon reductions, they also carry the highest embodied emissions. In contrast, shallow retrofits with high-efficiency air-source heat pumps offer near-comparable energy savings with significantly lower embodied impacts. Comparative analysis confirms that reducing heating setpoints has a greater effect on energy demand than increasing system efficiency, especially in low-performance buildings. Over a 25-year lifespan, shallow retrofits outperform deep retrofits in overall carbon efficiency, achieving up to 76% total emissions reduction versus 74% for deep scenarios. Also, as buildings approach near-zero energy standards, the embodied carbon share increases, highlighting the importance of LCA in design decision-making. This study provides a scalable, evidence-based methodology for evaluating retrofit options and offers practical guidance to engineers, researchers, and policymakers aiming to maximize carbon savings across residential building stocks.
Metadata
Item Type:Article (Published)
Refereed:Yes
Uncontrolled Keywords:Life cycle assessment; energy retrofit; embodied carbon; operational energy; residential buildings
Subjects:Engineering > Environmental engineering
Engineering > Engineering education
DCU Faculties and Centres:DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Engineering and Computing
DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Engineering and Computing > School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering
Publisher:MDPI
Official URL:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/17/18/8173
Copyright Information:Authors
ID Code:31527
Deposited On:15 Sep 2025 09:59 by Vidatum Academic . Last Modified 15 Sep 2025 09:59
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