Enhancing Eco-Engineering of Coastal Infrastructure with Eco-Design: Moving from Mitigation to Integration

  • Sylvain Pioch
  • , G. Relini
  • , J. C. Souche
  • , M. J. F. Stive
  • , D. De Monbrison
  • , S. Nassif
  • , F. Simard
  • , D. Allemand
  • , P. Saussol
  • , Richard E. Spieler
  • , Kirk Kilfoyle

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Eco-design aims to enhance eco-engineering practices of coastal infrastructure projects in support of ecological functions before these projects are developed and implemented. The principle is to integrate eco-engineering concepts in the early phases of project design. Although ecological losses are inherent in any construction project, the goal of eco-design is to introduce environmental considerations upfront during technical design choices, and not just afterwards when evaluating the need for reduction or compensatory mitigation. It seeks to reduce the negative impacts of marine infrastructure by introducing a new reflexive civil engineering approach. It requires a valuation of nature with the aim of reducing impacts by incorporating intelligent design and habitat-centered construction. The principle advocated in this paper is to design coastal infrastructures, at micro- to macro-biological scales, using a combination of fine and large scale physical and chemical modifications to hard substrates, within the scope of civil engineering requirements. To this end, we provide a brief introduction to the factors involved in concrete-biota interactions and propose several recommendations as a basis to integrate ecology into civil engineering projects, specifically addressed to concrete.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalEcological Engineering
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jun 6 2018

    Keywords

    • Coastal civil engineering
    • Eco-design
    • Eco-engineering
    • Ecological integration
    • Ecological restoration
    • Environmental impact assessment

    Disciplines

    • Marine Biology
    • Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology

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