Scientometric Analysis on Climate Resilient Retrofit of Residential Buildings

被引:0
|
作者
Touchette, Jacynthe [1 ]
Lethiecq-Normand, Maude [1 ]
Riahinezhad, Marzieh [2 ]
机构
[1] Intelligence and Analytics, National Research Council Canada, Ottawa,ON,K1A 0R6, Canada
[2] Construction Research Centre, National Research Council Canada, Ottawa,ON,K1A 0R6, Canada
关键词
Disaster prevention - Potassium alloys - Retrofitting - Risk management - Smart homes;
D O I
10.3390/buildings15050652
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study aims to understand the impacts of climate change and extreme climate events on residential buildings and explore how existing buildings can be adapted to resist these negative impacts. A bibliometric and scientometric analysis was conducted on resilient residential retrofits to highlight the prevalent themes, critical directions, and gaps in the literature, which can inform future research directions. The resilient residential retrofit publications from 2012 to 2023 were retrieved and analyzed using text-mining software. In all, 4011 publications and 2623 patents were identified. The analysis revealed an average annual publication growth rate of 11%, indicating increasing interest in resilient residential retrofits. Four central topics were explored specifically throughout the study, as they are known to be the most prevalent climate risks for residential buildings: Overheating, Flooding, Wind, and Wildfires. The research trends analysis reveals that emerging interests in resilient residential retrofit encompass nature-based solutions, energy efficiency, thermal comfort, microclimates, durability, post-disaster recovery, and extreme events. Nearly half of the publications reference urban context and over one-third mention costs. The building envelope is the most frequently discussed housing component. Although energy retrofit was not the primary focus of this study and was not specifically searched for, energy concerns were still prevalent in the dataset, highlighting the critical importance of energy efficiency and management in resilient residential retrofits. The analysis of R&D momentum revealed several research gaps. Despite high growth rates, there are low publication rates on key topics such as durability, holistic approaches, microclimates, nature-based solutions, and traditional homes, to name a few. These areas could benefit from further research in the context of climate-resilient residential retrofits. Additionally, the analysis indicates a lack of publications on cross-themed research specific to rural and suburban settings. There are also few studies addressing combinations of themes, such as overheating in high-rise buildings, wildfires in Nordic climates, and flooding risk in smart homes within the scope of resilient residential retrofits. The United States leads in publication output, followed by China and the UK, with China dominating the patent landscape. This scientometric analysis provides a comprehensive overview of the research landscape in resilient residential retrofit, systematically maps and analyzes the vast amount of research output, and identifies the key trends and gaps, enabling us to see a type of quantitative snapshot of the research in a field at a certain point in time and thus providing a unique point of view. This study helps stakeholders prioritize efforts and resources effectively for guiding future research, funding decisions, informing policy decisions, and ultimately enhancing the resilience of residential buildings to climate-related challenges. © 2025 by the authors.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Climate-resilient building energy efficiency retrofit: Evaluating climate change impacts on residential buildings
    Tomrukcu, Gokce
    Ashrafian, Touraj
    ENERGY AND BUILDINGS, 2024, 316
  • [2] Cost-optimal retrofit analysis for residential buildings
    Sigrist, Diego
    Deb, Chirag
    Frei, Mario
    Schluter, Arno
    CLIMATE RESILIENT CITIES - ENERGY EFFICIENCY & RENEWABLES IN THE DIGITAL ERA (CISBAT 2019), 2019, 1343
  • [3] Retrofit Analysis of City-Scale Residential Buildings in the Hot Summer and Cold Winter Climate Zone
    Ji, Yanfei
    Li, Guangchen
    Su, Fanghan
    Chen, Yixing
    Zhang, Rongpeng
    Asdrubali, Francesco
    Zhang, Weirong
    Li, Ning
    Dai, Jian
    Li, Ziwei
    ENERGIES, 2023, 16 (17)
  • [4] Towards climate resilient residential buildings: learning from traditional typologies
    Mohaibesh, D.
    Monna, S.
    Qadi, H.
    Sokkar, R.
    CARBON-NEUTRAL CITIES - ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLES IN THE DIGITAL ERA (CISBAT 2021), 2021, 2042
  • [5] Rethinking retrofit of residential heritage buildings
    Wise, Freya
    Moncaster, Alice
    Jones, Derek
    BUILDINGS & CITIES, 2021, 2 (01): : 495 - 517
  • [6] Analysis of Method of Northern Existing Residential Buildings Energy Conservation Retrofit
    Zhao, Peng
    Li, Deying
    Ren, Yanli
    6TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON HEATING, VENTILATING AND AIR CONDITIONING, VOLS I-III, PROCEEDINGS, 2009, : 2091 - 2097
  • [7] Energy performance analysis and low carbon retrofit solutions for residential buildings
    Liapopoulou, E.
    Theodosiou, T.
    SUSTAINABILITY IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT FOR CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION (SBE19), 2020, 410
  • [8] Energy retrofit of residential buildings: a multifunctional toolkit
    Aste, N.
    Scudo, P.
    Fedrizzi, R.
    Del Pero, C.
    Leonforte, F.
    2017 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CLEAN ELECTRICAL POWER (ICCEP): RENEWABLE ENERGY IMPACT, 2017, : 62 - 67
  • [9] Analysis of energy retrofit system using latent heat storage materials applied to residential buildings considering climate impacts
    Park, Ji Hun
    Wi, Seunghwan
    Chang, Seong Jin
    Kim, Sumin
    APPLIED THERMAL ENGINEERING, 2020, 169
  • [10] Analysis of energy retrofit system using latent heat storage materials applied to residential buildings considering climate impacts
    Park, Ji Hun
    Wi, Seunghwan
    Chang, Seong Jin
    Kim, Sumin
    Applied Thermal Engineering, 2022, 169