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Anna Carolina Menezes - Predicted vs Actual Energy Performance of Non Domestic Buildings.pdf (475.11 kB)

Predicted vs. actual energy performance of non-domestic buildings

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conference contribution
posted on 2012-03-02, 10:25 authored by Anna Carolina Kossmann de Menezes, Andrew Cripps, Dino Bouchlaghem, Richard BuswellRichard Buswell
With the increasing demand for more energy efficient buildings, the construction industry is faced with the challenge to ensure that the energy efficiency predicted during the design is realised once a building is in use. There is, however, significant evidence to suggest that buildings are not performing as well as expected and initiatives such as PROBE and CarbonBuzz aim to illustrate the extent of this so called "Performance Gap". This paper discusses the underlying causes of discrepancies between detailed energy modelling predictions and in-use performance of occupied buildings (after the twelve month liability period). Many of the causal factors relate to the use of unrealistic input parameters regarding occupancy behaviour and facilities management in building energy models. In turn, this is associated with the lack of feedback to designers once a building has been constructed and occupied. This paper aims to demonstrate how knowledge acquired from Post-Occupancy Evaluation (POE) can be used to produce more accurate energy performance models. A case study focused specifically on lighting, small power and catering equipment in a high density office building is presented. Results show that by combining monitored data with predictive energy modelling, it was possible to increase the accuracy of the model to within 3% of actual electricity consumption values. Future work will seek to use detailed POE data to develop a set of evidence based benchmarks for energy consumption in office buildings. It is envisioned that these benchmarks will inform designers on the impact of occupancy and management on the actual energy consumption of buildings. Moreover, it should enable the use of more realistic input parameters in energy models, bringing the predicted figures closer to reality.

History

School

  • Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering

Citation

MENEZES, A.C. ... et al., 2011. Predicted vs. actual energy performance of non-domestic buildings. Third International Conference on Applied Energy, Perugia, Italy, 16-18 May 2011.

Publisher

ICAE 2011 - International Conference on Applied Energy © the authors

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publication date

2011

Notes

This paper was presented at the Third International Conference on Applied Energy - 16-18 May 2011 - Perugia, Italy: http://www.icae2011.org/

Language

  • en