Abstract. A circular city builds upon the principles of circular economy, which key
concepts of reduce, reuse, recycle, and recover lead to a coupling of
resources: products and by-products of one production process become the
input of another one, often in local vicinity. However, sources, types and
available quantities of underutilised resources in cities are currently not
well documented. Therefore, there is a missing link in the information flow
of the circular city between potential users and site-specific data. To
close this gap, this study introduces the concept of a site resource
inventory in conjunction with a new information model that can manage the
data needed for advancing the circular city. A core taxonomy of terms is
established as the foundation for the information model: the circular
economy is defined as a network of circular economy entities which are
regarded as black boxes and connected by their material and energy inputs
and outputs. This study proposes a site resource inventory, which is a
collection of infrastructural and building-specific parameters that assess
the suitability of urban sites for a specific circular economy entity. An
information model is developed to manage the data that allows the entities
to effectively organise the allocation and use of resources within the
circular city and its material and energy flows. The application of this
information model was demonstrated by comparing the demand and availability
of required alternative resources (e.g. greywater) at a hypothetical site
comprising a commercial aquaponic facility (synergistic coupling of fish and
vegetables production) and a residential building. For the implementation of
the information model a proposal is made which uses the publicly available
geodata infrastructure of OpenStreetMap and adopts its tag system to
operationalise the integration of circular economy data by introducing new
tags. A site resource inventory has the potential to bring together
information needs and it is thus intended to support companies when making
their business location decisions or to support local authorities in the
planning process.
Aquaponics' potential to transform urban food production has been documented in a rapid increase of academic research and public interest in the field. To translate this publicity into real-world impact, the creation of commercial farms and their relationship to the urban environment have to be further examined. This research has to bridge the gap between existing literature on growing system performance and urban metabolic flows by considering the built form of aquaponic farms. To assess the potential for urban integration of aquaponics, existing case studies are classified by the typology of their building enclosure, with the two main categories being greenhouses and indoor environments. This classification allows for some assumptions about the farms' performance in their context, but a more in-depth life cycle assessment (LCA) is necessary to evaluate different configurations. The LCA approach is presented as a way to inventory design criteria and respective strategies which can influence the environmental impact of aquaponic systems in the context of urban built environments.
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