Consolidating design standards into a single code
Our team assessed and tested Dubai’s array of building design requirements, advising on the regulations to be removed, as well as those to be retained or amended for safety, wellbeing and to improve the sustainability and performance of the city’s buildings. For example, wind and seismic loading requirements were optimised based on Dubai specific data and research to reduce construction materials and embodied carbon.
The new DBC embeds sustainability requirements within each code part rather than having a standalone chapter with discrete sustainability requirements. This arrangement of the code requirements supports a coordinated and holistic approach to sustainable design. Benchmarking to international codes and engaging with Dubai’s authorities and service providers was essential to establishing a common vision for the code’s objectives, scope, and content. Aside from this, it ensured the code requirements benefited from international best practise while being specific and appropriate to the Dubai market.
Intended to be a prescriptive code, the DBC aims to simplify design and approvals for the most common building typologies. However, performance statements are provided at the start of each Part to describe the outcomes that the completed building is expected to achieve. The performance statements form a set of overarching regulations that convey the requirements of the DBC and allow alternative design solutions where a project cannot reasonably meet the prescribed requirements.
Since launching in January 2022, it has already been applied to major projects across the city, such as the prestigious Palm Flower residential building.