The role of occupants in buildings’ energy performance gap: Myth or reality?
Review article, 2021

Buildings’ expected (projected, simulated) energy use frequently does not match actual observations. This is commonly referred to as the energy performance gap. As such, many factors can contribute to the disagreement between expectations and observations. These include, for in-stance, uncertainty about buildings’ geometry, construction, systems, and weather conditions. However, the role of occupants in the energy performance gap has recently attracted much atten-tion. It has even been suggested that occupants are the main cause of the energy performance gap. This, in turn, has led to suggestions that better models of occupant behavior can reduce the energy performance gap. The present effort aims at the review and evaluation of the evidence for such claims. To this end, a systematic literature search was conducted and relevant publications were identified and reviewed in detail. The review entailed the categorization of the studies according to the scope and strength of the evidence for occupants’ role in the energy performance gap. Moreover, deployed calculation and monitoring methods, normalization procedures, and reported causes and magnitudes of the energy performance gap were documented and evaluated. The results suggest that the role of occupants as significant or exclusive contributors to the energy performance gap is not sufficiently substantiated by evidence.

Performance gap

Occupant behavior

Buildings

Energy

Author

Ardeshir Mahdavi

Vienna University of Technology

Christiane Berger

Vienna University of Technology

Hadeer Amin

Vienna University of Technology

Eleni Ampatzi

Cardiff University

Rune Korsholm Andersen

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Elie Azar

Khalifa University

Verena Barthelmes

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Matteo Favero

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Jakob Hahn

Munich University of Applied Sciences

Dolaana Khovalyg

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Henrik N. Knudsen

Aalborg University

Alessandra L. Navarro

University of Cambridge

Astrid Roetzel

Deakin University

Fisayo C. Sangogboye

University of Southern Denmark

Marcel Schweiker

RWTH Aachen University

Mahnameh Taheri

arbnco

Despoina Teli

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Services Engineering

Marianne Touchie

University of Toronto

Silke Verbruggen

Ghent university

Sustainability

20711050 (eISSN)

Vol. 13 6 3146

Subject Categories

Construction Management

Energy Systems

Building Technologies

DOI

10.3390/su13063146

More information

Latest update

4/15/2021