TY - JOUR
T1 - Façade refurbishment of existing office buildings
T2 - Do conventional energy-saving interventions always work?
AU - Pomponi, Francesco
AU - Farr, Eric R.P.
AU - Piroozfar, Poorang
AU - Gates, Jonathan R.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd.All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/7/27
Y1 - 2015/7/27
N2 - Offices account for 40% of energy use in construction sector. Office building stock is already under-performing and dilapidating at a fast pace. With the current rate of replacing old building stock in the UK, it is expected that at least 60% of what was built before 1985 still exists in 2050. Therefore, refurbishment, with an aim to improve performance of buildings, seems to remain as the most feasible and arguably most cost efficient way forward. Precedent studies in this area are not few and far between. However, some recommendations and interventions seems to have been taken for granted and thought to be globally applicable almost everywhere. This study chooses a recently refurbished office building to challenge this common belief. It was shown that, from the carbon point of view, benefits as a result of interventions were marginal. It was found that a full pre-refurbishment survey, measures aimed at reducing the performance gap between intended and actual figures, and study of occupancy patterns would probably help in this respect. The study results also showed that study of contextual conditions i.e. careful considerations with regards to building orientation, topography, site constraints, and exposure to solar gains will help achieve better results. Finally it was envisaged that better user engagement, communication and using few other measures to enhance user satisfaction will help guarantee some other aspects pertaining to performance than its mere energy consumption or carbon footprint.
AB - Offices account for 40% of energy use in construction sector. Office building stock is already under-performing and dilapidating at a fast pace. With the current rate of replacing old building stock in the UK, it is expected that at least 60% of what was built before 1985 still exists in 2050. Therefore, refurbishment, with an aim to improve performance of buildings, seems to remain as the most feasible and arguably most cost efficient way forward. Precedent studies in this area are not few and far between. However, some recommendations and interventions seems to have been taken for granted and thought to be globally applicable almost everywhere. This study chooses a recently refurbished office building to challenge this common belief. It was shown that, from the carbon point of view, benefits as a result of interventions were marginal. It was found that a full pre-refurbishment survey, measures aimed at reducing the performance gap between intended and actual figures, and study of occupancy patterns would probably help in this respect. The study results also showed that study of contextual conditions i.e. careful considerations with regards to building orientation, topography, site constraints, and exposure to solar gains will help achieve better results. Finally it was envisaged that better user engagement, communication and using few other measures to enhance user satisfaction will help guarantee some other aspects pertaining to performance than its mere energy consumption or carbon footprint.
KW - Building energy simulation
KW - Building performance
KW - Façade refurbishment
KW - Office buildings
KW - Office refurbishment
KW - Sustainable retrofit
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84937807920&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jobe.2015.07.003
DO - 10.1016/j.jobe.2015.07.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84937807920
SN - 2352-7102
VL - 3
SP - 135
EP - 143
JO - Journal of Building Engineering
JF - Journal of Building Engineering
ER -