Abstract

Building energy consumption accounts for 36% of the overall energy end use worldwide and is growing rapidly as developing countries continue to urbanize. Understanding the energy use at urban scale will lay the foundation for identification of energy efficiency opportunities to be deployed at speed. China has almost half of global new constructions and plays an important role in building suitability. However, an open source national building energy consumption database is not available in China. To provide data support for building energy consumptions, this paper used a simulation method to develop an urban building energy consumption database for a pilot city in Wuhan, China. First, residential, small, and large office building archetype energy models were created in EnergyPlus to represent typical building energy consumption in Wuhan. The baseline reference model simulation results were further validated using survey data from the literature. Second, stochastic simulations were conducted to consider different design parameters and occupants’ energy usage intensity scenarios, such as thermal properties of the building envelope, lighting power density, equipment power density, HVAC (heating, ventilation and air conditioning) schedule, etc. A building energy consumption database was generated for typical building archetypes. Third, data-driven regression analysis was conducted to support quick building energy consumption prediction using key high- level building information inputs. Finally, a web-based urban energy platform and an interface were developed to support further third-party application development. The research is expected to provide fast energy efficiency building design solutions for urban planning, new constructions as well as building retrofits.

Highlights

  • By 2050, 66% of the world’s population will live in urban areas [1], making urbanization one of the critical themes and challenges in this century

  • This paper shows our efforts on building archetype development for the urban energy

  • This paper shows our efforts on building archetype development for the urban energy simulation large office building) are created and demonstrated in this paper with the following innovations

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Summary

Introduction

By 2050, 66% of the world’s population will live in urban areas [1], making urbanization one of the critical themes and challenges in this century. The Oak Ridge National Laboratory and National Renewable Energy Laboratory have developed urban scale simulation tools, called AutoBEM and URBANopt, respectively [12,13] They used similar approaches: generate baseline building energy models for each building type as a template, categorize buildings in the area of interest into corresponding archetype and link to the template results, map the simulation results to a GIS platform for visualization. This method can provide quick design support for large scale energy decision making based on archetype data, without running detailed building energy simulation. There are no open sourced well-developed reference building models in China

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