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Type
Lecture

Carbon reduction through the design process using PAS 2080

Event organised by ICE

Date
26 June 2025
Time
18:00 - 19:30 BST (GMT+1)
Location
Seminar Space - Buro Happold
Camden Mill,
230 Lower Bristol Road
Bath, BA2 3DQ
United Kingdom

This event has now ended

Overview

PAS 2080 is a globally applicable standard for managing carbon in buildings and infrastructure.

The standard applies to new projects and programmes of work as well as the management or retrofit of existing assets and networks. This means that any new buildings or infrastructure projects should consider their carbon footprint throughout the lifecycle from design and construction to operation and end of life.

PAS 2080 not only promotes reduced carbon but encourages increased value delivery, a culture of challenging convention as well as fostering other co-benefits such as climate resilience and nature-based solutions. 

The ICE sponsors PAS 2080:2023 and has published an updated guidance document offering a range of case studies and examples.

Richard Brooks, ICE Fellow and author of Waterman’s PAS 2080 process and proforma, will present on endeavours to include sustainable initiatives through the engineering design process.  

The presentation will look to address the key aspects included in PAS 2080 with a high-level example project highlighting where opportunities and interfaces can deliver carbon reduction.  

This holistic overview will provide guidance on the responsibilities of the value chain and their ability to remove silos creating collaborative ways of working that promote innovation.

The event has been organised by the ICE Bath City Club.

Speaker

Richard Brooks

Richard Brooks

Waterman Infrastructure & Environment Ltd

technical director

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Richard Brooks

Mr Richard Brooks is technical director and National Service Lead for Civil Structures at Waterman Infrastructure & Environment Ltd. He has acted as supervising civil engineer or primary sponsor to 10 engineers working towards professional development qualifications. He also engages in career development activities at local schools and colleges. 
 
Having graduated from the University of Sheffield in 1997, Richard joined Waterman Group and has progressed through the ranks attaining Chartership with the Institute of Civil Engineering and recently Fellowship. He has had the honour of working on a number of prestigious projects, both in the design office and on site. He acknowledges that his site experience, including on site for the Royal Woolwich Arsenal Crossrail box, is his driver behind his attention to buildability within design and his want that engineers grow through their career understanding this aspect, amongst others. He is looking forward to supporting engineers further as together they embrace carbon reduction initiatives to further enhance their designs.
 
The judges were impressed by Richard’s approach to mentoring, which was embedded within the day-to-day working practices of his team, improving project quality and outcomes as a whole, rather than viewing mentoring as a standalone activity. He is clearly passionate about the growth and success of his mentees, and demonstrated the value he places on inter-personal professional relationships and providing constructive, positive feedback to motivate others.
 
Richard considers mentoring to be a perk of his role, and is a great believer in ownership and responsibility so that everyone can feel their worth as part of the team and engineering as a whole.