Abstract

The energy retrofitting of the existing building stock is one of the current challenging strategic objectives on the way to the European target of climate neutrality by 2050. According to the Renovation Wave plan, around 35 million existing buildings need to be upgraded to the highest energy efficiency level by 2030, and innovative technological solutions are required to achieve this ambitious goal. This paper proposes a novel solar exoskeleton for the energy and architectural retrofitting of existing buildings, called En-Solex. The system, which consists of an external steel frame that wraps around buildings like a double skin, combines passive solar gain control (shading and greening) with high-efficiency active solar systems (PV panels) optimised for integration into existing building facades. The energy-saving potential of the system with different façade configurations is evaluated on a multi-family residential building located in a Mediterranean climate. The dynamic energy simulations show that the proposed solution can reduce the energy demand for space heating and cooling by 33.4% and 25.5% respectively. The En-Solex system integration combined with generator replacement results in a maximum heating and cooling reduction equal to 80.7% and 59.6% respectively. The surplus of electricity generated, thanks to the integration of RES, can lead to a net plus target, with the building exceeding its average annual electricity demand.

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