Toward a Fast but Reliable Energy Performance Evaluation Method for Existing Residential Building Stock

Author:

Converso Stefano1ORCID,Civiero Paolo1ORCID,Ciprigno Stefano2,Veselinova Ivana2ORCID,Riffat Saffa3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Architecture, Roma Tre University, Via Ostiense, 133B, 00154 Rome, Italy

2. Innovation Lab, RIMOND, Via Giovanni da Castel Bolognese, 81, 00153 Rome, Italy

3. Buildings, Energy and Environment Research Group, Faculty of Engineering, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK

Abstract

Building a reliable energy model for old residential buildings with insufficient documentation and user assistance is a challenging and time-consuming task. Nevertheless, the ambitious European decarbonization targets require this building stock to be renovated, making energy assessment a key priority. In line with this goal, the following study explores a more simplified and automatic framework to generate a residential building energy model (BEM). The paper’s approach is based on the concept of urban building energy modelling (UBEM) archetypes or building prototypes and is customized according to the principles of dynamic simulations performed in the existing BEM software, Integrated Environmental Solutions Virtual Environment IES VE, and Solemma Open Studio. Therefore, based on three real starting inputs, a prototype database (DB) of assigned inputs is generated, i.e., an input matrix, using Google Maps as a geometry source. Other data are drawn from tabular DB. The proposed approach is evaluated by benchmarking the simulation results with precise models and monitoring the data that come from the Horizon2020 project REZBUILD. Nevertheless, a level of simplification is introduced that creates less accurate results for total or system-level energy consumption; this is compensated for using a set of simple calibration steps. The approach gives promising results for daily indoor temperature, making it a suitable indicator for evaluating further retrofitting alternatives.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Energy (miscellaneous),Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Control and Optimization,Engineering (miscellaneous),Building and Construction

Reference58 articles.

1. (2023, April 03). Gross Energy, EU, 1990–2020, 2020. [Online]. Available online: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Energy_statistics_-_an_overview#Final_energy_consumption.

2. IEA (2022). Global Energy and Climate Model, IEA.

3. European Comission (2020). Stepping up Europe’s 2030 Climate Ambition Investing in a Climate-Neutral Future for the Benefit of Our People, European Commission.

4. IEA (2022). Renovation of Near 20% of Existing Building Stock to Zero-Carbon-Ready by 2030, IEA.

5. Civiero, P., Pascual, J., Arcas Abella, J., and Salom, J. (2022). Innovative PEDRERA Model Tool Boosting Sustainable and Feasible Renovation Programs at District Scale in Spain. Sustainability, 14.

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