Abstract

In office buildings valuable energy is wasted if not properly regulated as a function of presence of humans and active demands for illumination levels. Effective and clever usage of the sunlight is essential for optimal use of energy resources in large office buildings. Additionally, productivity of the employees can be improved by maintaining a constant light intensity. In context of social distancing enforced onto landscape area structure and occupancy, they have effects in the illumination pattern and ergonomics. This paper presents the practical setup to mimic the illumination regulatory problem in landscape offices and the dynamic properties of such a system in the context of social distancing regulations. The light level control is performed with distributed predictive control, whereas a comparison is made among various situations. The original contribution of the paper is a fast, adaptive control algorithm, which can deal with changing context parameters; e.g. varying landscape office structures. Copyright (C) 2020 The Authors.

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