Applied Research Roadmap

January 23, 2026

If you have been following SPACE Architects’ research activity, this article brings together the strands developed since 2023 and sets out how that work is evolving. While the 2024–2025 phase focused on early-stage design and the development of D-CARB, the research programme continues, expanding into a broader framework that supports sustainable decision-making across projects and sectors. The themes that follow this ongoing focus and the priorities informing our work ahead.

Commencing in 2023, the Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) with Northumbria University focussed on the urgent challenge of reducing whole life carbon from the early design stages. Knowledge exchange through schemes such as the KTP are central to architectural research, ensuring that outputs are co-created with industry professionals, not just developed in isolation, ensuring research validation and enabling the output to be embedded within practice.  

The development of D-CARB (Design Carbon Assessment and Reduction for Buildings) through the KTP illustrates this, with engagement with architects and industry enhancing usability of the tool and highlighting a gap within the industry. This open-access Autodesk Revit plugin allows Architects and designers to have awareness of the impact of their design decisions from an early stage, making carbon literacy an integral part of the design process rather than something that is reported on later in the process. Tools like D-CARB ensure that all members of the design team can have the tools to make informed decisions surrounding Whole Life Carbon, as opposed to it being thought of as a specialist subject. 

The two year project highlights the importance of applied, impact driven research, tackling the disconnect between Architectural Practice and Academic research. As architecture confronts urgent challenges such as climate change and regulatory transform, research that produces usable tools, evidence and frameworks strengthens the professions agency in addressing these issues, positioning the profession as a driver of impact as opposed to a passive observer. 

The 2024/2025 research phase was focussed on early stage design, culminating in the development of D-CARB. This two year project has provided a strong backbone for a diversified research programme spanning 8 interlinking themes, forming the studios ongoing sustainable design strategy and research focus as the work continues into 2026 and beyond. These include: Need for Building, Benchmarks, Design Decisions, Embodied Carbon, Operational Carbon, Materials, Circular Economy and Regenerative Design. 

Need for Building 
80% of buildings that exist today will still be in use in 2050 and 19 % of the UK’s carbon footprint is from operational emissions (UKGBC), from energy needed to heat, cool and power our building, this highlights the need for retrofit and the importance of care for the existing building stock. It needs to be considered whether a new building is necessary or if existing building stock can be retrofitted and utilised.  

Benchmarks 
Setting benchmarks for projects within SPACE will help align with industry best practice and the goal to decarbonise the built environment. It will allow us to create targets and measure our progress in reducing the Whole Life Carbon of our buildings. Integrating benchmarks from the earliest stage of design will ensure the whole project team is invested in meeting these targets. 

Design Decisions
WLC of a project is set, often unknowingly, from the design phase. By utilising good early design decisions, WLC can be reduced by up to 40%. These design decisions can be analysed using D-CARB (Design Carbon Assessment and Reduction for Buildings), an open-access Autodesk Revit plugin that was developed by SPACE. D-CARB brings Whole Life Carbon analysis to the forefront of the design process, integrating it from the earliest stage of design. 

Embodied Carbon
Embodied carbon from the construction and refurbishment of buildings currently makes up 20% of the UK’s built environment emissions (UKGBC).  

Embodied carbon emissions are the emissions associated with the construction process and materials throughout the whole lifecycle of a building, also called the emissions from cradle to grave. 

Embodied carbon reduction and measurement is not currently within UK legislation, despite being a major source of the UK’s carbon emissions. Whilst many organisations are beginning to require embodied carbon reporting and reduction within projects, it is not yet mainstream practice. 

Materials
Within the research strategy, we will be reviewing and analysing the materials specified from the earliest stage of design across multiple projects. This will be in line with the Living Building Challenge reviewing forever chemicals within materials alongside the distance that the materials are sourced from the site. 

Operational Carbon 
Operational Carbon refers to the emissions that are released as a result of a building’s energy use. This can typically be attributed to hot water, heating, cooling, ventilation, lighting and other elements that use energy. 

A building with Net Zero carbon in operation is powered by 100% renewable energy and does not use fossil fuels.  

LETI, the World Green Building Council and Architecture 2030 believe that all new buildings must operate at net zero carbon by 2030 and all buildings must operate at net zero carbon by 2050 in order to meet climate change targets.

Circular Economy
A Circular Economy (CE) is an alternative to a traditional linear economy (make, use and dispose) in which resources for used for as long as possible and then they are recovered and made into other products and materials at the end of each service life. Creating a strategy to design circular economy practices into projects will create a new way of thinking, looking at design for disassembly, reuse and recycling.  

Regenerative Design
Regenerative design is an approach in which human and natural systems are designed to co-exist and co-evolve over time (Arup). SPACE are beginning to follow the values set out by the Living Building Challenge, which is a framework that encourages regenerative design, creating buildings that give back to the environment and community, creating no harm. 

Taken together, these themes reflect SPACE Architects’ commitment to research that is embedded and responsive to the realities of practice. As the work continues, the focus remains on translating research into usable tools, frameworks and decisions that support meaningful change across projects, sectors and the wider profession.