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Energy use and height in office buildings

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-06-26, 16:18 authored by Daniel Godoy-Shimizu, Philip Steadman, Ian Hamilton, Michael Donn, Stephen Evans, Graciela Moreno, Homeira Shayesteh

The relationship between energy use and height is examined for a sample of 611 office buildings in England and Wales using actual annual metered consumption of electricity and fossil fuels. The buildings are of different ages; they have different construction characteristics and methods of heating and ventilation; and they include both public and commercial offices. When rising from five storeys and below to 21 storeys and above, the mean intensity of electricity and fossil fuel use increases by 137% and 42% respectively, and mean carbon emissions are more than doubled. A multivariate regression model is used to interpret the contributions of building characteristics and other factors to this result. Air-conditioning is important, but a trend of increased energy use with height is also found in naturally ventilated buildings. Newer buildings are not in general more efficient: the intensity of electricity use is greater in offices built in recent decades, without a compensating decrease in fossil fuel use. The evidence suggests it is likely – although not proven – that much of the increase in energy use with height is due to the greater exposure of taller buildings to lower temperatures, stronger winds and more solar gains.

Funding

This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)-funded ‘High-Rise Buildings: Energy and Density’ [grant number EP/N004671/1] and the EPSRC-funded ‘RCUK Centre for Energy Epidemiology’ [grant number EP/K011839/1].

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