Guidelines to bridge the gap between adaptive thermal comfort theory and building design and operation practice
Paper in proceeding, 2020

Adaptive thermal comfort guidelines have been developed within the work of Annex 69: “Strategy and practice of adaptive thermal comfort in low energy buildings”. The guidelines have been established based on a framework for adopting adaptive thermal comfort principles in building design and operation developed by the authors. The guidelines target building practitioners, addressing the critical interrelated role building planners, building operators and occupants play. A successful adaptive thermal comfort design, in which design for human thermal adaptation is foreseen, planned, and carefully embedded in the design and operation intent, is based on broad knowledge and understanding of the multiple quantifiable and non-quantifiable factors influencing human perception, as well as human building interaction. Adaptive building design follows a user-centric integrated design approach and therefore it is critical to consider the occupants' and the operators' role in buildings already in the design phase. This paper focuses on three main challenges identified earlier and how these are addressed in the guidelines, i.e. i) updating prevailing knowledge about human thermophysiology and adaptation, ii) developing a procedure for design of adaptive opportunities, and iii) providing guidance for operational planning and operation of adaptive buildings. The challenge for future research remains to assess the magnitude of how specific design decisions affect particular adaptive mechanisms.

Adaptive thermal comfort

Building energy efficiency

Integrated Design

Personal control

Stakeholder

Climate context

Occupant

Author

Runa T. Hellwig

Aalborg University

Despoina Teli

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Services Engineering

Marcel Schweiker

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Joon Ho Choi

University of Southern California

M. C.Jeffrey Lee

National Taichung University of Science and Technology

Rodrigo Mora

British Columbia Institute of Technology

Rajan Rawal

CEPT University

Zhaojun Wang

Harbin Institute of Technology

Farah Al-Atrash

German Jordanian University

11th Windsor Conference: Resilient Comfort, WINDSOR 2020 - Proceedings

529-545
9781916187634 (ISBN)

11th Windsor Conference on Thermal Comfort: Resilient Comfort, WINDSOR 2020
Virtual, Online, ,

Subject Categories

Architectural Engineering

Other Civil Engineering

Building Technologies

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

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2/26/2024