smart buildings

Why smart buildings are beneficial?

Smart, or smartly designed buildings are not only a trend but a real need to use all available resources at hand to improve the living standards and contribute to create and maintain a sustainable place to live in, that is, in a smart living city.

Buildings in different countries must be designed according to the local climate in order to obtain the maximum of benefits for energy saving. For example, Punjab, India, proposed a practical approach for the new buildings’ design to use all the possible daylight for energy balance both in summer and winter.

What started with a declaration in 2001 known as Energy Conservation Act in Punjab, has turned recently into a law obliging all new buildings with a connected load of 100 kilowatt and more to follow a power-saving code through which it will be possible to reduce energy consumption by up to 40%. The code applies to all buildings with an air-conditioned area of 500 square meters, besides to complexes, group houses, offices, hotels, shopping zones, and private hospitals. According to Punjab Energy Development Agency (Peda), the code covers the following aspects: building aesthetics, envelope, mechanical system, the equipments for heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning, interior and exterior lighting, and hot-water service, besides electrical power and motors for thermal comfort in non-central-AC buildings.

These actions pretend to involve different professionals related to construction and urban management, for instance, chief architects, chief town planners, local bodies, and agencies involved in clearing construction projects in urban centers. Of course, modern technologies are needed to drive towards sustainable urban energy systems.

This is also a valuable contribution to the environment protection since this practice allows to reduce notoriously greenhouse gases emissions. Actually, energy inefficient constructions are highly responsible for such emissions, according to IEA. Between now and 2050 a large portion of new buildings – equivalent to 40% of the world’s current building stock – will be built in cities in emerging and developing economies. The situation regarding inefficient buildings already constructed and the projection of new ones must be checked urgently if we want to prioritize the climate change – a hard but possible task, although many governments must cooperate and unite their efforts to promote serious regulations regarding new constructions and maintenance of old ones. This will revert positively in living conditions, safety, economic growth, just naming a few.

Sources:

New building code to save ‘40% power’ coming up in Punjab.

Make building standards top priority for tackling climate change.

Energy Technology Perspectives 2016.

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The European project School of the Future has demonstrated the viability of creating energy efficient schools

The School of the Future project has arrived at last, financed by the European Commission under the FP7 framework and has counted upon four pilot schools in all of Europe and located in different regions (Denmark, Germany, Italy and Norway).  The project emphasizes how schools may be sources of exceptional energy efficiency, providing a high quality interior environment, while also being economically viable.

Through the renovation of existing schools and their power systems, the integration of renewable energy solutions and the creation of advanced management systems, the project wanted to demonstrate that the complete use of energy may be reduced by a factor of 3.

On the other hand, a 75% reduction in the power usage for heating may be achieved with an investment of less than € 100 for cubic meter, addressing the results obtained by the project.

Another of the project’s objective was to disseminate the results obtained through the students themselves from the schools that served as pilots, consociating families to the activities of energy efficiency and its results.

It has also equipped the classroom with tools to educate students, the faculty and service personnel in energy efficiency topics with the objective of expanding knowledge on an area with much relevance for the European Union such as environmental sustainability.

http://www.school-of-the-future.eu/

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