flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Energy Analysis No Longer a Luxury

Energy Analysis No Longer a Luxury


November 2, 2010
This article first appeared in the November 2010 issue of BD+C.

Back in the halcyon days of 2006, energy analysis of building design and performance was a luxury. Sure, many forward-thinking AEC firms ran their designs through services such as Autodesk’s Green Building Studio and IES’s Virtual Environment, and some facility managers used Honeywell’s Energy Manager and other monitoring software. Today, however, knowing exactly how much energy your building will produce and use is survival of the fittest as energy costs and green design requirements demand precision.

“Energy is now a variable cost on the balance sheet, particularly with healthcare projects,” says Greg Turner, director of global offerings, Honeywell Building Solutions. “What we see happening for facilities managers is they’re talking to CFOs more regularly and the question is always. ‘What’s my energy cost going to be next quarter?’”

Building Teams and facility managers are using these energy analysis tools to keep clients’ bottom lines low and meet regulatory requirements for energy saving.

Green Building Studio: Innumerable design iterations

Green Building Studio is a Web-based tool that can help architects and designers perform whole building analysis, optimize energy efficiency, and work toward carbon neutrality earlier in the design process. Available via subscription service at www.greenbuildingstudio.com, Green Building Studio uses the DOE-2.2 simulation engine to calculate energy performance. It also creates geometrically accurate input files for EnergyPlus, the Department of Energy’s building simulation program. Crucial to the integrated interoperability of the program is the gbXML schema, an open XML schema of the International Alliance of Interoperability’s aecXML group. By using gbXML-enabled applications, Green Building Studio Web service users can eliminate redundant data entry and dramatically reduce the time and expense traditionally associated with whole-building energy simulation analyses.

“Our users will perform 50 to 100 iterations of a design,” says John Kennedy, senior manager, sustainable analysis products for Autodesk AEC Solutions and the CEO of GBS from its founding in 2004 through its acquisition by Autodesk in 2008. “They try out everything from type of glass to different levels of insulation, and each iteration requires a full simulation for proper energy use estimates. Running off of the Web, our users can run these calculations from the cloud and perform them a lot faster than if they were tied to their desktop resources.”

Engineering firm Glumac, based in Portland, Ore., uses GBS for energy analysis on many of its projects, such as the University of Hawaii at Manoa Recreation Center. Glumac’s scope of work included design review, whole building energy simulation, computational fluid dynamics analysis for natural ventilation, and sustainability consulting. The 67,000-sf project includes activity courts, locker rooms, aerobics facilities, and free weights. Glumac used GBS to quickly iterate energy consumption estimates for a variety of exterior shading devices, understanding energy use driven by landscape shading elements, and the effects of several different glazing configurations.

“Traditional analysis would have been too cumbersome to address these questions within our budget or within a fast enough timeframe to provide meaningful feedback to the design team,” says Skander Spies, an energy analyst in Glumac’s Portland office. Glumac created the initial geometry in Revit, then was able to import it into Green Building Studio and export a file compatible with other advanced analysis tools, such as EnergyPlus or eQuest. “This process results in more geometrically accurate models that take less time and budget to create, allowing our team to spend more time looking at the issues that matter,” says Spies.

In its most recent subscription update, Autodesk made the GBS service available to anyone with a Revit Architecture or Revit MEP subscription and integrated its features into Revit’s massing feature. Now, energy results are automatically updated in Revit, the company’s native building information modeling program.

“Building owners are asking more often for in-depth analysis,” says Autodesk’s Kennedy. “They want stronger performance guarantees for both new designs and renovations, and they’re asking about the drivers of building performance. We’re moving in the direction of making that data a normal, automated process.”

IESVE: Integrating documentation and design

Integrated Environmental Solutions was founded in 1994 in Scotland with the goal of developing primarily academic tools for building performance design and analysis and bringing them into mainstream use, according to founder and managing director Don McLean. In the interim, the company has launched commercially viable software that has grown to encompass design and analysis for all building design disciplines. Its products span a range of price and performance levels from the free and easy to the most detailed and rigorous.

IES’s main tool is its Virtual Environment (VE) Pro, a suite of software that integrates the entire process of designing buildings for environmental and energy considerations. Each module of the VE suite—for example, VE/Mechanical, VE/Electrical, or VE/Lighting—is tailored to analyze specific performance components of buildings. VE/Thermal includes energy performance measurement tools such as Apache SIM, Apache HVAC, and MacroFlo for total building and room-by-room energy calculation, simulation, and HVAC system design. VE Pro includes a full 3D modeling program for AEC professionals who want to create their designs natively. It can also import from Revit, SketchUp, or the gbXML file formats.

“You can perform the level of analysis you want all in one platform,” says Suzanne Robinson, an energy consultant at IES. “How detailed your building becomes is up to the user. We just want to engage them from the beginning in the design stage.”

VE Pro users can create baselines that integrate documentation in their design processes. The program’s LEED toolkit keeps track of compliance with LEED criteria and points across LEED-NC V2.2/V3, LEED for Schools V1/V3, and LEED Core and Shell V2/V3. The Sustainability VE toolkit tracks climate, natural resources, building metrics, construction materials, energy, carbon, daylight, solar shading, water, low- and zero-carbon technologies, and ASHRAE/CIBSE heating and cooling loads.

“It’s such a robust software engine we can more easily model complex designs,” says Mark Chu, a building physicist in AECOM’s advanced design group, based in Orange, Calif. “We can model things that we couldn’t before because the software isn’t constrained.”

Some of the projects AECOM has used VE Pro for energy modeling include the NASA Ames N232 Collaborative Support Building (registered for LEED Platinum) and NASA Johnson Space Center Building 26 (registered for LEED Gold).

Honeywell Energy Manager: Pinpoint performance issues

Energy Manager is a Web-based advanced energy management and information system designed to capture, analyze, and act on data to help solve energy problems in existing buildings. Energy Manager’s software uses an existing building’s in-place infrastructure to track energy dollars, impact of weather on consumption, and similar energy-related issues.

If a room or floor has leaky windows, Energy Manager can isolate higher heating costs in that area and report the problem back to the facility manager. It also uses diagnostics to show metrics and behaviors of pieces of equipment to be analyzed for peak performance. Energy Manager’s data can be accessed anywhere from the Web and can be used to set up daily or weekly weather-neutralized energy consumption reports e-mailed directly to supervisors.

“It’s designed to mine data,” Turner says.  “You can create as many virtual metering solutions as your building needs. It’s designed to let customers add the functionality they need without adding new systems.” BD+C

—Jeff Yoders, Contributing Editor

Related Stories

Giants 400 | Jan 3, 2024

Top 200 Reconstruction Architecture Firms for 2023

Gensler, Stantec, HDR, Corgan, and PBK Architects top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest building reconstruction/renovation architecture and architecture engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in the 2023 Giants 400 Report.

Designers | Jan 3, 2024

Designing better built environments for a neurodiverse world

For most of human history, design has mostly considered “typical users” who are fully able-bodied without clinical or emotional disabilities. The problem with this approach is that it offers a limited perspective on how space can positively or negatively influence someone based on their physical, mental, and sensory abilities.

Giants 400 | Jan 2, 2024

Top 120 Hotel Architecture Firms for 2023

Gensler, WATG, HKS, DLR Group, and HBG Design top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest hotel and resort architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report. 

Resiliency | Jan 2, 2024

Americans are migrating from areas of high flood risk

Americans are abandoning areas of high flood risk in significant numbers, according to research by the First Street Foundation. Climate Abandonment Areas account for more than 818,000 Census Blocks and lost a total of 3.2 million-plus residents due to flooding from 2000 to 2020, the study found.

MFPRO+ News | Jan 2, 2024

New York City will slash regulations on housing projects

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is expected to cut red tape to make it easier and less costly to build housing projects in the city. Adams would exempt projects with fewer than 175 units in low-density residential areas and those with fewer than 250 units in commercial, manufacturing, and medium- and high-density residential areas from environmental review. 

Contractors | Dec 22, 2023

DBIA releases two free DEI resources for AEC firms

The Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA) has released two new resources offering guidance and provisions on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) on design-build projects.

MFPRO+ News | Dec 22, 2023

Document offers guidance on heat pump deployment for multifamily housing

ICAST (International Center for Appropriate and Sustainable Technology) has released a resource guide to help multifamily owners and managers, policymakers, utilities, energy efficiency program implementers, and others advance the deployment of VHE heat pump HVAC and water heaters in multifamily housing.

Sustainability | Dec 22, 2023

WSP unveils scenario-planning online game

WSP has released a scenario-planning online game to help organizations achieve sustainable development goals while expanding awareness about climate change.

Giants 400 | Dec 20, 2023

Top 160 Apartment and Condominium Architecture Firms for 2023

Gensler, Humphreys and Partners, Solomon Cordwell Buenz, and AO top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest apartment building and condominium architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.  

Giants 400 | Dec 20, 2023

Top 90 Student Housing Architecture Firms for 2023

Niles Bolton Associates, Solomon Cordwell Buenz, BKV Group, and Humphreys and Partners Architects top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest student housing facility architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Urban Planning

Bridging the gap: How early architect involvement can revolutionize a city’s capital improvement plans

Capital Improvement Plans (CIPs) typically span three to five years and outline future city projects and their costs. While they set the stage, the design and construction of these projects often extend beyond the CIP window, leading to a disconnect between the initial budget and evolving project scope. This can result in financial shortfalls, forcing cities to cut back on critical project features.



Libraries

Reasons to reinvent the Midcentury academic library

DLR Group's Interior Design Leader Gretchen Holy, Assoc. IIDA, shares the idea that a designer's responsibility to embrace a library’s history, respect its past, and create an environment that will serve student populations for the next 100 years.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021