A Perspective of Energy Codes and Regulations for the Buildings of the Future

Author:

Rosenberg Michael1,Jonlin Duane2,Nadel Steven3

Affiliation:

1. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, 2032 Todd Street, Eugene, OR 97405 e-mail:

2. Seattle Department of Construction and Inspections, P.O. Box 34019, Seattle, WA 98124 e-mail:

3. American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, 529 14th Street NW #600, Washington, DC 20045 e-mail:

Abstract

Today's building energy codes focus on prescriptive requirements for features of buildings that are directly controlled by design and construction teams and verifiable by municipal inspectors. Although these code requirements have had a significant impact, they fail to influence a large slice of the building energy use pie—including not only miscellaneous plug loads, cooking equipment, and commercial/industrial processes but the maintenance and optimization of the code-mandated systems as well. Currently, code compliance is verified only through the end of construction, and there are no limits or consequences for the actual energy used in a building after it is occupied. In the future, our suite of energy regulations will likely expand to include building efficiency, energy use, or carbon emission budgets over their full life cycle. Intelligent building systems, extensive renewable energy, and a transition from fossil fuel to electric heating systems will likely be required to meet ultralow-energy targets. This paper considers short and long-term trends in the building industry, lays out the authors' perspectives on how buildings may evolve over the course of the 21st century, and discusses the roles that codes and regulations will play in shaping those buildings of the future.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

Reference40 articles.

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4. Hart, R., Price, W., Taylor, J., Reichmuth, H., and Cherniack, M., 2008, “Up on the Roof: From the Past to the Future,” ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE), Pacific Grove, CA, pp. 3:119–3:130.http://aceee.org/files/proceedings/2008/data/papers/3_295.pdf

5. ASHRAE Vision 2020: Providing Tools by 2020 That Enable the Building Community to Produce Market-Viable NZEBs by 2030;ASHRAE,2008

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