Abstract

The restoration of historical buildings often implies a change in the main use of the building so that it can once again become a part of people’s lives. Among the interventions needed to adapt the buildings to their new purpose, improving the energy performance is always a challenge due to their particular construction solutions and the influence that these improvements can have on their protected elements. The regulations in force in European Union (EU) member states leave a gap in how the energy performance evaluations in these types of buildings can be defined, and even exclude them from the process. However, rehabilitation of buildings is always seen as an opportunity, because it allows the building to once again be useful to society and play an important role in people’s lives. At the same time, it can also improve their performance and allow benefits to be gained from their use through a reduction in maintenance costs. In the rehabilitation process, the economic viability of the renovation plays a fundamental role which must be compared, in the case of protected buildings, to its impact on the architecture of the building. Since 2002, the EU has issued directives with the aim that countries should define objective methods to improve the energy performance of buildings and, in recent times, methods that demonstrate the amortization of such improvements. Within the process of implementing the new methodologies adapted to the EPBD, Spain was one of the last EU countries to define a process for the energy assessment of existing buildings, introducing an analysis of the economic viability of the construction improvements suggested in the process. The objective of this research was to describe the decision-making process during the evaluation of the feasibility of introducing construction improvements to the energy performance of two catalogued historic buildings located in a warm climate. The estimated energy consumption was evaluated, the net present value (NPV) and the payback period of the investment calculated, and the results obtained were compared with the real energy consumption. At the end of the process, it can be said that the methodologies adopted in Spain offer results that can lead designers to make wrong decisions that may affect the protected heritage values of these buildings.

Highlights

  • The overall value of a building is not solely limited to its economic, artistic, technical, or historical merits

  • The calculation of the value of the net present value (NPV), as indicated in Table 13, shows that regardless of the method and the program used, in no case is the investment recovered in the calculation period defined by the delegated regulation and by the Spanish official methods, in the case of the Cisterns, the values are closer to a positive result

  • The lack of homogeneity in the results made it difficult to analyze the decisions adopted in the project and, made it difficult to evaluate the impact that a construction improvement may have on the energy performance of a building

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Summary

Introduction

The overall value of a building is not solely limited to its economic, artistic, technical, or historical merits. Some of the oldest or most used buildings become anchor points for those who live close by, and reinforce the need to maintain history and tradition to create a healthy urban environment. The loss of a building with historical, cultural, and artistic value is a material fact, but more importantly, results in the loss of collective identity, which is never to be restored. When these buildings reach the end of their lifespan, sometimes a change of use needs to be integrated in the urban network again. The evaluation of the viability of these construction improvements must be done from two points of view—economic viability, and the impact on the architecturally protected elements

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