The role of modularity in sustainable design: A systematic review. Sonego, M., Echeveste, M. E. S., & Galvan Debarba, H. Journal of Cleaner Production, 176:196–209, March, 2018.
The role of modularity in sustainable design: A systematic review [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Modularity is a strategy recognized by the academia and the industry, and modular architecture is argued to play an important role in the development of sustainable products. The objective of this article is to explore the intersection between modularity and sustainable design from the perspective of the product life cycle. To achieve this objective, a systematic review was conducted and a total of 81 articles were selected and distributed in seven different categories of subjects: Life Cycle Assessment, Design for X, Green Modularization, Manufacture, Modularization Reviews, Supply Chain, and Usage. We identified in the literature that: (i) benefits are claimed in every life cycle phase (production, use, and disposal); (ii) academic research is mainly focused in the production phase and in projecting product disposal scenarios, offering a wide variety of methods and methodologies to modularize products with environmental concerns. However, modularity could also present limitations, and the realization of its benefits is partially influenced by user's decisions. Our conclusion points that, in spite of the association of modularity with environmental benefits, a better understanding of the entire life cycle of modular products and their environmental impact is needed to decide whether modularization is a suitable sustainable strategy or not.
@article{sonego_role_2018,
	title = {The role of modularity in sustainable design: {A} systematic review},
	volume = {176},
	issn = {0959-6526},
	shorttitle = {The role of modularity in sustainable design},
	url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652617330561},
	doi = {10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.12.106},
	abstract = {Modularity is a strategy recognized by the academia and the industry, and modular architecture is argued to play an important role in the development of sustainable products. The objective of this article is to explore the intersection between modularity and sustainable design from the perspective of the product life cycle. To achieve this objective, a systematic review was conducted and a total of 81 articles were selected and distributed in seven different categories of subjects: Life Cycle Assessment, Design for X, Green Modularization, Manufacture, Modularization Reviews, Supply Chain, and Usage. We identified in the literature that: (i) benefits are claimed in every life cycle phase (production, use, and disposal); (ii) academic research is mainly focused in the production phase and in projecting product disposal scenarios, offering a wide variety of methods and methodologies to modularize products with environmental concerns. However, modularity could also present limitations, and the realization of its benefits is partially influenced by user's decisions. Our conclusion points that, in spite of the association of modularity with environmental benefits, a better understanding of the entire life cycle of modular products and their environmental impact is needed to decide whether modularization is a suitable sustainable strategy or not.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2018-07-27},
	journal = {Journal of Cleaner Production},
	author = {Sonego, Monique and Echeveste, Márcia Elisa Soares and Galvan Debarba, Henrique},
	month = mar,
	year = {2018},
	pages = {196--209}
}

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