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SUMMARY:Sustainability and the SPAB Approach
DESCRIPTION:Part of Conservation in Common, a cross-disciplinary series of events for professionals working in the built heritage sector.\n\nTalk hosted by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings\n\nThe climate crisis is the single biggest challenge facing humanity, and the construction industry must play a huge role in tackling this. However, as the saying goes, the greenest building is the one that already exists, so carefully examining how existing building stock can be re-used in a sustainable way is crucial.\n\nSPAB strongly believes that sensitive improvement and repair of historic buildings is a sustainable approach, which can reduce the impact of the built environment on the climate. This approach to building conservation offers a ‘simple message of sustainability’ since, in William Morris’s words, ‘we are only trustees for those that come after us’.\n\nThis talk examine why we should value our historic buildings for both their beauty and their sustainability, the role that building maintenance has to play in protecting our built heritage, and some ways that greater energy efficiency in old buildings can be achieved.\nAbout the speaker\n\nTríona Byrne is a co-founder of the Irish branch of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB) and served as Chair for 5 years from its foundation in 2017 until 2021. She is a Structural Engineer working on conservation projects on buildings of all ages, style and size in the greater Dublin region. She completed the SPAB Scholarship in 2017 and is a SPAB Trustee. She is on the Conservation Group committee of Engineers Ireland and has been involved with the ICOMOS Ireland National Scientific Committee on Energy, Sustainability and Climate Change. She is a member of the Building Limes Forum of Ireland and the Dry Stone Walling Association of Ireland. 

X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">\n<HTML>\n<HEAD>\n<META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="MS Exchange Server version 08.00.0681.000">\n<TITLE></TITLE>\n</HEAD>\n<BODY>\n<!-- Converted from text/rtf format -->\n\nPart of Conservation in Common, a cross-disciplinary series of events for professionals working in the built heritage sector.<br /><br />Talk hosted by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings<br /><br />The climate crisis is the single biggest challenge facing humanity, and the construction industry must play a huge role in tackling this. However, as the saying goes, the greenest building is the one that already exists, so carefully examining how existing building stock can be re-used in a sustainable way is crucial.<br /><br />SPAB strongly believes that sensitive improvement and repair of historic buildings is a sustainable approach, which can reduce the impact of the built environment on the climate. This approach to building conservation offers a ‘simple message of sustainability’ since, in William Morris’s words, ‘we are only trustees for those that come after us’.<br /><br />This talk examine why we should value our historic buildings for both their beauty and their sustainability, the role that building maintenance has to play in protecting our built heritage, and some ways that greater energy efficiency in old buildings can be achieved.<br />About the speaker<br /><br />Tríona Byrne is a co-founder of the Irish branch of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB) and served as Chair for 5 years from its foundation in 2017 until 2021. She is a Structural Engineer working on conservation projects on buildings of all ages, style and size in the greater Dublin region. She completed the SPAB Scholarship in 2017 and is a SPAB Trustee. She is on the Conservation Group committee of Engineers Ireland and has been involved with the ICOMOS Ireland National Scientific Committee on Energy, Sustainability and Climate Change. She is a member of the Building Limes Forum of Ireland and the Dry Stone Walling Association of Ireland. \n\n</BODY>\n</HTML>

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