11 Facts About Adaptive reuse

1.

Adaptive reuse refers to the process of reusing an existing building for a purpose other than which it was originally built or designed for.

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2.

Adaptive reuse is an effective strategy for optimizing the operational and commercial performance of built assets.

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3.

The most important governing factors of adaptive reuse decision making with respect to asset condition were observed to be the building's structural integrity, its residual service life, its spatial layout, its location and the ease of retrofitting or installing new building components to the existing built form.

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4.

Therefore, regular maintenance and Adaptive reuse of existing structures can help communities avoid the trauma caused by dilapidation, abandonment and clearance.

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5.

Lack of adaptive reuse of existing built assets, on a societal level, has caused disturbance due to dislocation of residents, economic decline and disruption of community life, eventually leading to abandoned and obsolete neighborhoods.

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6.

Adaptive reuse means that the stakeholders of the built asset are relieving governments and municipalities off the load of having to supply these public amenities on distant plots.

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7.

At this point, the building's adaptive reuse potential is either an upward curve or a downward curve which can determine whether the potential is high, medium or low.

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8.

Adaptive reuse has several benefits to mitigate those high impacts.

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9.

Adaptive reuse projects are, in many ways, different from conventional new construction projects and must be planned and managed differently.

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10.

In Europe, the main forms of adaptive reuse have been around former palaces and unused residences of the different European royal families into publicly accessible galleries and museums.

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11.

In Paris, France, the most famous example of adaptive reuse is the Musee du Louvre, a former palace built in the late 12th century under Philip II and opened to the public as a museum in 1793.

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