Can 🏨 hotels recycle wastewater from tourism? Yes, they can! In European...

EU Environment and Planet 2 years ago

Can 🏨 hotels recycle wastewater from tourism? Yes, they can! In European regions where water is scarce, hotels are exploring ways to conserve and recycle the 💧 water consumed by tourists. At a hotel located on the heights of 🇪🇸 Girona, more than half of the water consumed comes from rainwater collected on the roofs of the buildings. This water passes through several filters before flowing into the taps and showers and even a natural swimming pool, which the amphibians share with the tourists. Learn more about preserving water resources and #WaterWiseEU in our bio. #water #Spain #waterconservation #hotels #circulareconomy #recycling

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 11 minutes ago



Sustainable construction is entering a phase of structural transformation where policy, materials innovation, and digital traceability drive measurable reductions in whole life carbon and embodied carbon emissions. The expansion of biomethanol technology through industrial-scale projects demonstrates that low carbon building operations and renewable building materials are reaching commercial maturity. This acceleration aligns with the sector’s commitment to achieving net zero whole life carbon through sustainable building practices and rigorous whole life carbon assessments that expose the true environmental impact of construction.

Urban development models rooted in sustainable building design now integrate green infrastructure, vegetation, and water systems to reduce heat gains and energy demand, supporting energy-efficient buildings that meet BREEAM and BREEAM v7 standards. These climate-responsive planning measures shift the focus from post-construction mitigation to proactive eco-design for buildings, connecting sustainable architecture with life cycle thinking in construction and ensuring greater resource efficiency.

Digital innovation is strengthening building lifecycle performance by embedding lifecycle assessment across supply chains to track the carbon footprint of construction materials. The transparency offered by environmental product declarations (EPDs) underpins circular economy in construction frameworks that promote end-of-life reuse in construction and circular construction strategies. These initiatives reinforce the drive towards carbon neutral construction and the decarbonising of the built environment while addressing the life cycle cost implications of sustainable material specification.

This convergence of policy, technology, and green construction methods marks a decisive shift from theory to measurable performance. Low carbon construction materials, embodied carbon in materials analysis, and low carbon design are now central to sustainable urban development. The result is an emerging industrial fabric where sustainable design and eco-friendly construction provide a realistic pathway to net zero carbon buildings and long-term environmental sustainability in construction.

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