A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Building materials and construction:Sustainability, dependency and foreign suppliers
This chapter describes the extraction of mineral subsoil resources in a changing context of increasing internationalisation and domestic concern for nature and the environment. The cases are gravel and marl in the province of Limburg and the European inventory of strategic mineral resources. The period around 1970 formed the high point of Dutch building activities. The extraction and production of building materials had an increasing impact on the landscape (see Chap. 14). Bringing laws against excavations and spatial planning to bear, the government increased its control over the extraction activities. The new policy integrated the excavations in spatial planning and landscape goals. The politicisation of environmental issues led to the harmonisation of the extraction of mineral resources with the local societal requirements for tourism, nature development, and flood control. Intensification of European cooperation positioned domestic extraction within a European economic framework. Higher prices for gravel and other building materials made recycling, among other things, attractive. The mining of gravel shifted in part to surrounding countries where it resulted in local damage to the landscape. The outsourcing of gravel mining was similar to the overall European offshoring of the mining of mineral subsoil resources. From 2008 the European Commission commenced investigations into strategic mineral resources. The Netherlands followed in its footsteps. Initially, geological, economic and geo-political aspects were the main concerns. In a later phase, environmental issues and working conditions played a role. Developments in the area of well-being and sustainability required not only measures close to home, but also a concern for these issues outside of the Netherlands.
Building materials and construction:Sustainability, dependency and foreign suppliers
This chapter describes the extraction of mineral subsoil resources in a changing context of increasing internationalisation and domestic concern for nature and the environment. The cases are gravel and marl in the province of Limburg and the European inventory of strategic mineral resources. The period around 1970 formed the high point of Dutch building activities. The extraction and production of building materials had an increasing impact on the landscape (see Chap. 14). Bringing laws against excavations and spatial planning to bear, the government increased its control over the extraction activities. The new policy integrated the excavations in spatial planning and landscape goals. The politicisation of environmental issues led to the harmonisation of the extraction of mineral resources with the local societal requirements for tourism, nature development, and flood control. Intensification of European cooperation positioned domestic extraction within a European economic framework. Higher prices for gravel and other building materials made recycling, among other things, attractive. The mining of gravel shifted in part to surrounding countries where it resulted in local damage to the landscape. The outsourcing of gravel mining was similar to the overall European offshoring of the mining of mineral subsoil resources. From 2008 the European Commission commenced investigations into strategic mineral resources. The Netherlands followed in its footsteps. Initially, geological, economic and geo-political aspects were the main concerns. In a later phase, environmental issues and working conditions played a role. Developments in the area of well-being and sustainability required not only measures close to home, but also a concern for these issues outside of the Netherlands.
Building materials and construction:Sustainability, dependency and foreign suppliers
Veraart, F.C.A. (author) / Lintsen, Harry / Veraart, Frank / Smits, Jan-Pieter / Grin, John
2018-06-14
Veraart , F C A 2018 , Building materials and construction : Sustainability, dependency and foreign suppliers . in H Lintsen , F Veraart , J-P Smits & J Grin (eds) , Well-Being, Sustainability and Social Development : The Netherlands 1850-2050 . Springer , Cham , pp. 417-434 . https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76696-6_19
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
710
Building directory: Listing BEC members, specialist contractors, and materials suppliers
British Library Online Contents | 1994
materials suppliers' web sites
Online Contents | 1997
Core materials suppliers predict growth
British Library Online Contents | 2001
|Predicting Materials Suppliers' Bad Debt
British Library Online Contents | 2000
|