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Impact of climate change on thermal comfort and energy performance in offices - a parametric study

conference contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Astrid RoetzelAstrid Roetzel, A Tsangrassoulis
This paper investigates the impact of climate change on comfort and energy performance in offices in relation to the influence of building design and occupants. It focuses on a typical cellular office room in the context of Athens, Greece, as input for a parametric study using the building simulation software EnergyPlus. Three different building design variations are combined with two different occupant scenarios and 4 different weather data sets for IPCC climate change scenario A2.

For naturally ventilated buildings adaptive thermal comfort is evaluated according to ASHRAE Standard 55 and EN 15251. For mixed mode context evaluation is focused on greenhouse gas emissions and peak heating / cooling loads. Results indicate significant impact of the climate change on thermal comfort, and deviations between both comfort models. Comparing climate change, building design and occupant scenarios indicates that building design is the predominant influence on thermal comfort, whereas occupants are the predominant influence on greenhouse gas emissions.

History

Event

Healthy Buildings. Conference (10th : 2012 : Brisbane, Qld.)

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

Location

Brisbane, Qld.

Place of publication

Brisbane, Qld.

Start date

2012-07-08

End date

2012-07-12

ISBN-13

9781921897405

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Title of proceedings

HB 2012 : Proceedings of the 10th International Conference of Healthy Buildings

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