An Assessment of the Implementation of Green Design Strategies in Selected Museums in Abuja, Nigeria
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Civil Engineering and Architecture e 12(3A)
Abstract
This study evaluates the implementation of
green design strategies in selected museums in Abuja,
Nigeria to inform sustainable approaches tailored to the
local context. The qualitative study utilizes observational
assessments of 3 major museums – Discovery Museum,
Nike Art Gallery, and Retro Africa Gallery. A comparative
analysis investigates the adoption of passive design,
alternative energy, and water efficiency strategies based on
a structured criterion aligned with global sustainability
standards. The findings reveal a moderate integration of
fundamental techniques like proper orientation, thermal
mass walls, solar PV panels, and native drought-resistant
plants across the museums. However, substantial gaps exist
in implementing more comprehensive solutions like
building insulation, greywater recycling, rain gardens, eco
fixtures, and real-time metering. While initial steps have
been taken, holistic opportunities remain to transform the
museums into genuinely sustainable, net-zero facilities
through extensive daylighting, diverse renewable systems,
and total water recycling. The Retro Africa Gallery
emerges as a leader, exemplifying an integrated green
design approach. Recommendations are provided focused
on state-of-the-art passive design, diversified alternative
energy generation, and closed-loop water conservation
strategies tailored to the contextual needs of Nigerian
museums. The study concludes these institutions can become inspiring models of ecological design, leading
broad climate action through pioneering sustainable
architecture.
Description
Keywords
Green Building, Museum Architecture, Passive Design, Renewable Energy, Water Efficiency, Sustainability, Nigeria