EFFICIENT RESOURCE PLANNING


Resource planning is one of the main tasks of design. Site elements and forces may be seen as problems or opportunities. Wind may damage crops or drive a wind mill; water may erode stream edges or fill ponds; the sun may burn sensitive seedlings or promote growth. We must look at conditions in a positive and creative manner to use them effectively. Nature will do a considerable amount of work as it converts, distributes, filters, assimilates and stores materials. We want to put these natural processes to work for us. Efficient resource planning maximizes the use of biological, chemical and physical materials on the site to reduce the need for outside energy and materials.

Three key strategies to efficient resource planning are first to reduce use of materials altogether, second to reuse materials to the extent possible, and lastly to resort to recycling. The reduction of material use will mean that resources do not have to be converted from raw to finished products. This will reduce the use of energy used in manufacture and transport, and potential pollution from wastes. The selection of materials may be based on the lowest cost over their life of manufacture, use and disposal. Reuse of materials without need for major conversion takes advantage of expenditures and resource conversions that have already taken place and gives old products a new, useful life. Recycling reduces disposal problems but requires an additional manufacturing process for resource conversion that is not needed by material reduction and reuse strategies.

Other strategies for efficient resource use include: