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Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor
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Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Overview of Energy Efficiencyfor GGR314

Danny Harvey, Professor

Page 2: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

The German Passive Standard for Residential Buildings:

• A heating load of no more than 15 kWh/m2/yr, irrespective of the climate, and

• By comparison, the average heating energy intensity of all housing in Canada (detached and multi-unit) is about 150 kWh/m2/yr (ten times the passive house standard!)

Source: “Energy Efficiency Trends in Canada, 1990-2005, Chapter 3, Residential Sector”, http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/Publications/statistics/trends07/chapter3.cfm?attr=0

Page 3: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Estimated fuel energy use (largely for heating) in Canadian multi-unit residential buildings

0

50

100

150

200

Fu

el U

se (

kWh

/m2 /y

r)

PassiveHouse Standard

Page 4: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Thermal Energy Intensity, U of T Buildings

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

Schoo

l of C

ontin

uing

Studie

s

Early

Lear

ning

Centre

Schoo

l of M

anag

emen

t

Simco

e Hall

Facult

y of E

duca

tion

OISE

Admiss

ions O

ffice

Med

ieval

Studie

s

Bahen

Edwar

d Jo

hnso

n

97 S

t. Geo

rge

St (CL)

Sidney

Sm

ith H

all (S

S)

Woo

dswor

th C

olleg

e

Facult

y Club

McL

enna

n Phy

sics

Th

erm

al E

ne

rgy

Inte

nsi

ty (

kWh

/m2 /y

r)625

Passive House Standard

Page 5: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Explosive growth in the number of buildings meeting the Passive House standard in Austria

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Num

ber

of D

wel

ling

Uni

ts

New during current year

Finished at start of year

Page 6: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Biotop Office Building, Austria

Page 7: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Reidberg high school, Frankfurt (Germany)

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 8: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Triple-glazing throughout, maximized passive solar heat gain

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 9: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Heating required during the winter for only a couple of hours Monday mornings, using two small biomass-pellet boilers

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 10: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

South facade, Reidberg high school

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 11: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Retractable external shading

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 12: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Passive ventilation and night-time cooling; mechanical system shut off from ~ early May - end of September

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 13: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

The Passive House standard has been achieved in several thousand buildings in Germany, Austria and other European countries (as far north as Helsinki, Finland), and in a wide variety of different types of buildings (residential, schools, day care centres, banks, gymnasia)

It is now the legally required standard for new municipally-owned buildings in a number of cities in Germany and Austria (the largest being Frankfurt)

Something close to the Passive Standard is likely to be the national requirement in several countries in Europe before 2020.

Page 14: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Specifically,

• City of Frankfurt: since 2007, all municipal buildings must meet the standard

• City of Wels, Austria: same thing since 2008• Vorarlberg, Austria: Passive Standard is

mandatory for all new social housing• Freiberg, German: all municipal buildings must

meet close to the PH standard• City of Hanover: since 2005, all new daycare

centres to meet the Passive House standard (resolution only – legal status not clear)

Page 15: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Climate Comparisons, Heating Season

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

He

ati

ng

De

gre

e D

ay

s (

K-d

ay

s)

Page 16: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

To achieve the Passive House standard requires

• High levels of insulation (U-values of 0.10-0.15 W/m2/K, R35-R60)

• High performance windows (usually TG, double low-e, argon-filled)

• Meticulous attention to avoidance of thermal bridges

• Meticulous attention to air-tightness• Mechanical ventilation with heat recovery• Attention to building form (much easier in multi-

unit than single family housing)

Page 17: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Example of a residential heat exchanger, where the two airstreams are divided into channels separated by thin

aluminum plates, transferring heat from warm outgoing stale air to the cold fresh incoming air

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 18: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Thermally-separated balconies

in Frankfurt

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 19: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Extra cost of building to the Passive House standard:

• About 5% of the construction cost in Germany or Austria

• About 10% of the construction cost in Canada (due to the need for specialized supervision of the construction process)

Page 20: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Progressive decrease, through learning, in the extra cost of Passive Houses in Germany

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

35019

90

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

Ad

dit

ion

al I

nv

es

tme

nt

(€/m

2 ) o

f P

as

siv

e R

ow

Ho

us

es

1991 Prototype: experimental house,4 dwellings in Kranichstein usinghandicraft batch production

PH in Groß-Umstadt:Reduced costs bysimplification

Settlement in Wiesbaden:Serially produced windows & structural elements

Settlements in Wuppertal,Stuttgart, Hanover

Row houses in Darmstadt, 80 €/m2

Profitability with contemporary

interest rates & energy

Page 21: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

The EnergyBase building in Vienna, Austria

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 22: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Interior view of south-facing facade, with tilted glass and adjustable reflective blinds

Source: Ursula Schneider, Pos Architekten, Vienna

Page 23: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Due to the inclination of the south-facing glazing, it functions like vertical north-facing glazing in the summer, while the solar irradiance on the PV panels is maximized

0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 80000

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Stunde des Jahres

Solarstrahlung auf PV Paneel Solarstrahlung auf Südfassadenverglasung

W/m²

0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 80000

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Stunde des Jahres

Solarstrahlung auf vertikale Südfassade Solarstrahlung auf vertikale Nordfassade

W/m²

Source: Ursula Schneider, Pos Architekten, Vienna

Page 24: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Exhaust air is overheated by passing through a sort of solarium, then passes

through a heat exchange to heat the incoming fresh air to a greater extent than would be possible with a conventional heat exchanger system. And unlike systems for passive solar preheating of ventilation air, we still get the benefit of heat recovery on

the exhaust air at night

Page 25: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Combination of solar heating of fresh air and heat recovery from exhaust air in the EnergyBase building

Source: Ursula Schneider, Pos Architekten, Vienna

Page 26: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Air temperatures during flow through solarium and heat exchanger

Page 27: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Best Canadian example: Enermodal headquarters building (“A Grander View”) in Waterloo, Ontario: heating + hot water energy requirement of 27 kWh/m2/yr

(so heating alone would be close to the Passive House Standard)

Page 28: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.30 Solar chimneys on the Building Research Establishment (BRE) building in Garston, UK

Source: Copyright by Dennis Gilbert, View Pictures (London)

Page 29: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.31 Torrent Centre, Ahmedabad, India

0 5m

Exhaust

ExhaustExhaust

Inlet

Micrionizers

Exhaust

Offices Laboratories

Source: George Baird (2001, The Architectural Expression of Environmental Control Systems, Spon Press, London)

Page 30: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.32 Torrent Centre, Ahmedabad, India

Source: George Baird (2001, The Architectural Expression of Environmental Control Systems, Spon Press, London)

Page 31: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Chilled ceiling cooling

• Our perception of temperature depends roughly 50:50 on the air temperature and on the radiant temperature (the temperature of the surroundings, which are a source of infrared radiation on our bodies)

• A nice sensation of coolness is achieved if the ceiling is cooled to 16-20ºC by circulating water at this temperature through panels attached to the ceiling

• The result is a much higher chiller COP than conventional cooling systems (which use water at 6-8ºC) and warmer permitted air temperature

Page 32: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.48 Chilled Ceiling cooling panels

Source: www.advancedbuildings.org

Page 33: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Because the ceiling panels need water cooled down to only 16-20ºC, and the cooling tower

almost always produces water at this temperature, the cooling tower water can be directly used in a chilled ceiling cooling system most of the time –

providing yet further energy savings

Page 34: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Displacement ventilation

• Ventilation air is introduced from vents in the floor at a temperature slightly below the desired room temperature

• The air is heated from internal heat sources and rises in a laminar manner, displacing the pre-existing air, and exiting through vents in the ceiling

• 40-60% less airflow is required than in a conventional ventilation system (which we assumed to be already reduced to the flow required for air quality purposes only)

Page 35: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.49 Displacement ventilation floor diffuser

Source: Danny Harvey

Page 36: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Renovations to the Passive House Standard (15 kWh/m2/yr heating load)

• Dozens carried out in old (1950s, 1960s) multi-unit residential buildings in Europe, resulting in 80-90% reduction in heating energy use

• Two examples will be shown here:-BASF buildings in Ludwisghafen, Germany- apartment block in Dunaújváros, Hungary

Page 37: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.83 BASF residential retrofit, Germany, before and after

Source: Wolfgang Greifenhagen, BASF

Page 38: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.84 BASF retrofit (a) installation of external insulation, (b) installation of plaster with micro-encapsulated phase change materials

Source: Wolfgang Greifenhagen, BASF

Page 39: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Figure 4.85 Renovation to the Passive House Standard in Dunaújváros, Hungary. Before:

Source: Andreas Hermelink, Centre for Environmental Systems Research, Kassel, Germany

Page 40: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

After:

Source: Andreas Hermelink, Centre for Environmental Systems Research, Kassel, Germany

Page 41: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Net result:

• 90% reduction in heating energy use – this saves natural gas that can be used to generate electricity at 60% efficiency (or even higher effective efficiency in cogeneration), thereby serving as an alternative to new nuclear power plants

• Problems of summer overheating were greatly reduced

• A grungy, deteriorating building was turned into something attractive and with another 50 years at least of use

Page 42: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

In Toronto

• There are opportunities for similarly large reductions through retrofitted old 1960s and 1970s apartment towers

• Single-family houses will be harder and more expensive, but are doable

• But what will we do with all the glass condominiums and office towers being built now?

Page 43: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Table 4.34 Current and projected energy use (kWh/m2/yr) after various upgrades of a typical pre-1970 high-rise apartment building in Toronto.

DHW=domestic hot water, IRR=internal rate of return, HRV=heat recovery ventilator.

N a tu r a l G a s M e a su re H ea t in g D H W

E lec -tr ic ity

P r im a ry E n e rg y

C o st ($ /m 2 )

P a y b a ck (y e a rs)

IR R (% /y r )

C u rren t b u ild in g 2 0 3 3 6 7 1 4 4 3 R o o f in su la tio n 1 8 4 3 6 7 0 4 2 0 1 3 11 .4 11 .3 C la d d in g u p g r a d e 1 6 7 3 6 6 9 3 9 8 4 4 1 8 .1 3 .4 W in d o w u p g r a d e 1 2 2 3 6 6 4 3 3 6 7 3 1 3 .5 9 .2 B a lco n y e n c lo su re 1 2 2 3 6 6 8 3 4 5 1 2 1 2 1 4 .3 A ll o f th e a b o v e 4 7 3 6 6 4 2 5 2 1 9 9 1 8 .6 5 .6 B o ile r u p g r a d e 11 8 3 6 7 0 3 4 7 2 3 5 .5 2 3 H R V 1 3 6 3 6 6 8 3 6 2 1 7 7 .8 2 5 .8 W a ter c o n se rv a t io n 2 0 3 2 5 7 0 4 3 0 5 3 .4 3 5 .1 P a r k a d e lig h tin g 2 0 3 3 6 7 0 4 4 0 0 4 .4 2 8 A ll o f th e a b o v e 9 .4 2 5 5 9 1 8 5 2 5 7 1 6 .9 6 .7 A b o v e w ith 5 0 % less te n a n t e le ctr ic ity 2 4 .1 2 5 2 9 1 2 8

Page 44: Overview of Energy Efficiency for GGR314 Danny Harvey, Professor.

Further reading (books published by Earthscan):

2006 March 2010 April 2010