Abstract

The Directive 2010/31/EU on the energy performance of buildings has introduced the standard of “nearly zero-energy buildings” (NZEBs). European requirements place the obligation to reduce energy consumption on all European Union Member States, particularly in sectors with significant energy consumption indicators. Construction is one such sector, as it is responsible for around 40% of overall energy consumption. Apart from a building’s mass and its material and installation solutions, its energy consumption is also affected by its placement relative to other buildings. A proper urban layout can also lead to a reduction in project development and occupancy costs. The goal of this article is to present a method of optimising single-family house complexes that takes elements such as direct construction costs, construction site organisation, urban layout and occupancy costs into consideration in the context of sustainability. Its authors have analysed different proposals of the placement of 40 NZEBs relative to each other and have carried out a multi-criteria analysis of the complex, determining optimal solutions that are compliant with the precepts of sustainability. The results indicated that the layout composed of semi-detached houses scored the highest among the proposed layouts under the parameter weights set by the developer. This layout also scored the highest when parameter weights were uniformly distributed during a test simulation.

Highlights

  • Designing and building a complex of single-family houses, with a holistic focus on sustainable development, and construction and occupancy costs, is a problem that is very difficult to solve

  • The layout method developed by authors assumes a multi-criteria includes of demand of several urban alternatives, which is to be optimal inanalysis termsthat of cost andaspects energy sustainability, as well as the costs of the construction and occupancy of a complex of single-family minimisation, in addition to being compliant with the precepts of sustainable development and houses

  • The urban layouts under analysis can differ in terms of building on the given building variants and their siting) have been determined siting, as well as the size using or type buildings semi-detached, terraced)

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Summary

Introduction

Designing and building a complex of single-family houses, with a holistic focus on sustainable development, and construction and occupancy costs, is a problem that is very difficult to solve. It is a multi-aspect problem, in which decision variables include, among others: selecting construction materials, building services, the parameters of the shape of the buildings, their placement on the site, the sequence in which individual buildings are to be constructed and the completion deadlines for individual tasks. One should add an analysis of the impact of the change in energy costs. The paper [1] presents an analysis of the profitability of investing in a selection of three systems based on renewable energy sources, using a semi-detached house as an example

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