Abstract
PurposeThis paper aims to demonstrate the optimization of an existing residential building in a tropical climate using indigenous materials as an alternative to conventional building envelopes to achieve thermal comfort and affordable housing.Design/methodology/approachThis study mainly adopted a quantitative research methodology through a comprehensive simulation study on a selected prototype building. The energy plus simulation tool in DesignBuilder was used to predict the average monthly and annual thermal comfort of a typical residential building in the study area. Also, a cost analysis of the final optimization interventions was conducted to estimate the construction cost savings.FindingsThe comparative analysis of simulation results for the base-case and optimized models indicates potential advantages in replacing conventional building envelope materials with indigenous materials. The base-case simulation results showed that the annual operative temperature is more than the adaptive thermal comfort set points in tropical climates, by 8.26%. This often leads to interventions using mechanical cooling systems, thus triggering overconsumption of energy and increase in CO2 emissions. The building envelope materials for floor, walls and roof were replaced with low U-values indigenous materials until considerable results in terms of thermal comfort and overall building construction cost were achieved. The final simulation results showed that using indigenous materials for the ground floor, external walls and roof could substantially reduce the annual operative temperature by 8%, thereby increasing the predicted three months of thermal comfort in the base-case to nine months annually. Likewise, there was a 32.31%, 35.78% and 41.81% reduction in the annual CO2 emissions, cooling loads and construction costs, respectively.Originality/valueThe knowledge of indigenous materials as an alternative to conventional materials for sustainable buildings is not new. However, most of the available research is focused on achieving affordable housing. There is a dearth of research showing the extent that these indigenous materials can be used to improve indoor thermal comfort in developing countries with tropical climates such as Nigeria.
Subject
Building and Construction,Civil and Structural Engineering
Reference52 articles.
1. New towns in Africa: modernity and/or decentralization?,2010
2. Abubakar, I.R. (2014), “Abuja city profile”, doi: 10.1016/j.cities.2014.05.008 (accessed 16 July 2017).
3. Passive design strategies for residential buildings in a hot dry climate in Nigeria;WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment,2010
4. Incentive zoning: an alternative to squatter settlements in Abuja, Nigeria;International Journal of Economics and Management Sciences,2015
5. Alao, D.A. (2009), A Review of Mass Housing in Abuja, Nigeria: Problems and Possible Solutions towards Sustainable Housing, Unpublished M.Sc. (School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape) Thesis Report, pp. 1-139 (accessed 22 August 2017).
Cited by
13 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献