An assessment of energy-saving solutions for the envelope design of high-rise buildings in temperate climates

A case study in the Netherlands

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

Babak Raji (TU Delft - Climate Design and Sustainability)

Martin Tenpierik (TU Delft - Building Physics, TU Delft - Architectural Engineering +Technology)

Andy van den Dobbelsteen (TU Delft - Architectural Engineering +Technology, TU Delft - Climate Design and Sustainability)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2015.10.049 Final published version
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Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Bibliographical Note
Accepted Author Manuscript
Journal title
Energy and Buildings
Volume number
124
Pages (from-to)
210-221
Downloads counter
424
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Abstract

The building envelope is the interface between the interior of the building and the outdoor environment. A building's energy consumption to a large extent depends on certain envelope design elements. As a consequence, for achieving high levels of energy-saving in buildings, design measures with high impact should be firstly defined and then optimised. This paper aims at finding energy-saving solutions for the envelope design of high-rise office buildings in temperate climates. For this purpose an existing tall office building is selected as a typical high-rise design in the Netherlands and the energy use prior and after refurbishment is compared through computer simulations with DesignBuilder. A sensitivity analysis in line with a large number of energy performance simulations showed which building envelope parameters have a significant impact on the building's energy consumption; hence need more consideration for improvement. The four measures selected for uplifting the energy performance of the building envelope include glazing type, window-to-wall ratio, sun shading and roof strategies. By taking the base case as a reference and optimising one parameter at each step, this study resulted in a high-performance envelope design that offers a considerable energy-saving by around 42% for total energy use, 64% for heating and 34% for electric lighting.

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