Effect of Block Morphology on Building Energy Consumption of Office Blocks: A Case of Wuhan, China

Author:

Xu Shen12,Li Gaomei12,Zhang Hailong3,Xie Mengju1,Mendis Thushini4,Du Hu5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Architecture & Urban Planning, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430073, China

2. Hubei New Urbanization Engineering and Technology Research Center, Wuhan 430073, China

3. China Railway Development and Investment Group Co., Ltd., Kunming 650500, China

4. Department of Architecture and Built Environment, University of Nottingham, Ningbo 315100, China

5. School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment, Liverpool John Moores University, Cherie Booth Building, Byrom St., Liverpool L3 3AF, UK

Abstract

Block morphology refers to critical parameters influencing building energy performance on the block scale. However, analysis of the combined effect of block morphological parameters on building energy consumption with real blocks is lacking. In this paper, the aim is to evaluate the combined effect of office block morphology on building energy consumption in the context of the Hot-summer and Cold-winter zone in China. First, a workflow for the energy assessment of office buildings with the coupled block morphology on the block scale was proposed with evaluation tools. Seventy office blocks in Wuhan were taken as examples and then classified based on building layout typology and building height. Afterwards, the morphological parameters and building energy use intensity (EUI) for different blocks were calculated. Then, the combined effect of block morphology on the buildings’ energy consumption was evaluated and the model on predicting the building energy consumption of office blocks was proposed. Finally, based on the results, low-energy design strategies were projected for office blocks. The results illustrated that the effect of block morphology on building cooling, heating, and lighting is EUI 28.83%, 28.56%, and 23.23%, respectively. Building shape factor (BSF), floor area ratio (FAR), average building height of block (BH), and average building depth of block (BD) are effective block morphological parameters. The key morphological parameters which combined affect the building energy consumption of office blocks are BSF and FAR; BSF has 1.24 times the effect on building energy consumption than FAR. The workflow built in this paper can be applied to other cities around the world for promoting sustainable cities.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation

HUST Academic Frontier Youth Team

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Building and Construction,Civil and Structural Engineering,Architecture

Reference61 articles.

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3. Central People’s Government of the People’s Republic of China (2023, January 20). Proposal of the CPC Central Committee on Formulating the 14th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development and the long-range Goals for the next Five-Year Period, Available online: http://www.gov.cn/zhengce/2020-11/03/content_5556991.htm.

4. The State Council of China (2023, January 20). Carbon Peaking Action Programme by 2030, Available online: http://www.gov.cn/zhengce/content/2021-10/26/content_5644984.htm.

5. China Association of Building Energy Efficiency (2016). China Building Energy Consumption Research Report 2016, China Association of Building Energy Efficiency.

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