Towards a framework to evaluate the ‘total’ performance of buildings

Author:

Taylor Jonathon1,Liu Yanchen2,Lin Borong2,Burman Esfand1,Hong Sung-Min1,Yu Juan2,Wang Zhe2,Mumovic Dejan1,Shrubsole Clive1,Vermeer Daan1,Davies Mike1

Affiliation:

1. UCL Institute for Environmental Design and Engineering, University College London, London, UK

2. Department of Building Science and Key Laboratory of Eco Planning & Green Building, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China

Abstract

Internationally, buildings are a major contributor to carbon emissions. Despite significant advances in the technology and construction of energy-efficient buildings, in many cases a performance gap between designed and actual performance exists. While much research has investigated the drivers of the building energy performance gap – both static and transient– there has been considerably less research into the total performance gap, defined here as performance gaps in building energy use, occupant satisfaction and Indoor Environmental Quality parameters such as thermal comfort and air quality which may impact on occupant health and wellbeing. This paper presents a meta-analysis of building performance data from buildings in the UK and China – selected due to their contrasting development environments – which illustrate the presence of and complexities of evaluating total performance gaps in both countries. The data demonstrate the need for (1) high end-use, spatial granularity and temporal resolution data for both energy and Indoor Environmental Quality, and (2) developing methodologies that allow meaningful comparisons between buildings internationally to facilitate learning from successful building design, construction methodologies and policy environments internationally. Using performance data from a UK building, a potential forward path is illustrated with the objective of developing a framework to evaluate total building performance. Practical application: While much research has examined building energy performance gaps, Indoor Environmental Quality and occupant satisfaction gaps are rarely included despite their relationship to energy. We use a meta-analysis of energy, indoor environmental quality, and occupant satisfaction data from buildings in the UK and China to illustrating the presence of and complexities of evaluating total performance gaps for buildings in the two countries, and the need for high resolution dynamic buildings data and novel methodologies for comparison between buildings across different contexts. Illustrative case studies are used to demonstrate potential future directions for evaluating ‘total’ building performance.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Building and Construction

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