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Housing Economics

L1. Housing Economics. Course : Housing economic (AE 431) level 5. FALL 2011. LEC 2 : Building Economic. Housing Economics. L2. Why do we need a building ? “Birds & animals”, “Beast master”, “Lost World”, “Survivors” - Common link - We are not them

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Housing Economics

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  1. L1 Housing Economics Course : Housing economic (AE 431) level 5 FALL 2011 LEC 2 : Building Economic

  2. Housing Economics L2 • Why do we need a building ? “Birds & animals”, “Beast master”, “Lost World”, “Survivors” - Common link - We are not them • Designing and making buildings : Stakeholders - “Sky is the limit”, constraints to the choice of building systems - Codes, regulations, ordinances, unions, etc. • How to choose a building system ? “Experience”, “Pleasing to the eyes”, “Economical”, etc. • Performanceduring and after construction LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  3. Housing Economics Why do we Need Buildings? L2 • We build because little that we do can take place outdoors. We need shelter from sun, wind, rain, and snow. We need dry, level platforms for our activities. Often we need to stack these platforms to multiply available ground space. On these platforms, and within our shelter, we need air that is warmer or cooler, more or less humid, than outdoors. We need less light by day, and more light by night, than is offered by the natural world. We need services that provide energy, communications and water and disposal of wastes. So we gather materials and assemble them into the constructions we call buildings to satisfy these needs. LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  4. Housing Economics L2 What are the minimum requirements? • Legal Security of Tenure: this protects people from eviction, harassment, and other threats. The States must provide and enforce security of tenure in consultation with affected groups • Availability of Services, Materials, Facilities, and Infrastructure: Housing includes facilities essential for health, security, comfort, and nutrition. For example, there must be safe drinking water, energy for cooking, heating, lighting, sanitation facilities, refuse disposal, storage and emergency services • Affordability: The cost of adequate housing should not compromise the satisfaction of other basic needs LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  5. Housing Economics L2 LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  6. Housing Economics L2 • Cost= anything that reduces your business objective • Benefit= anything that contributes to it • Two types of costs: investment(capital costs) and operational(on-going) LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  7. Housing Economics Investments (Costs) L2 • Preliminary(meetings, legal, land) • Construction(excavation, structures, buildings) • Equipment(vehicles, lab, etc.) LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  8. Housing Economics L2 • Cost is a resource sacrificed or foregone to achieve a specific objective, or something given up in exchange. • Profits are revenues minus expenses • Life cycle costing is estimating the cost of a project plus the maintenance costs of the products it produces • Cash flow analysis is determining the estimated annual costs and benefits for a project • Benefits and costs can be tangible or intangible, direct or indirect LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

  9. Housing Economics L2 • Cost estimating: Developing an approximation or estimate of the costs of the resources needed to complete a project. • Cost budgeting: Allocating the overall cost estimate to individual work items to establish a baseline for measuring performance. • Cost control: Controlling changes to the project budget. LEC 2 : Building Economic FALL 2011

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