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Measured Home Environment and Energy Consumption Compared to Accepted Standards

Hasim Altan (BEAU, School of Architecture, School of Architecture, The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom)
Mohamed Refaee (BEAU, School of Architecture, The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom)
Liangxiu Han (School of Computing, Mathematics and Digital Technology, Manchester Metropolitan University)
Masa Noguchi (Mackintosh School of Architecture, The Glasgow School of Art, United Kingdom)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 September 2013

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Abstract

Energy usage of households accounts for a significant portion of total energy consumption and carbon emissions. Scottish homes today are highly energy consumers emitting on average 3 tonnes of CO2 per house annually and the amount exceeds the UK average of 2.75 tonnes of CO2. Moreover, 26% of the households are actually facing fuel poverty and it is therefore a critical task to efficiently manage and minimise energy trends in housing in order to meet carbon dioxide (CO2) emission reduction and energy consumption cut targets such as 80% overall cuts in carbon emissions by 2080 for the UK, compared with 1990 levels. The study has been undertaken within the Zero Energy Mass Custom Homes (ZEMCH) research network's demonstration projects e.g. ‘ZEMCH 109’. The existing post-council end-terraced house was intended to be extended in South Ayrshire, Scotland in 2012. As part of the project, the Building Environments Analysis Unit (BEAU) research centre has conducted a post occupancy monitoring of the energy and indoor environmental conditions e.g. indoor air temperature, relative humidity and CO2 levels in the Scottish affordable home which will also continue even after the construction of the newly built extension and the refurbishment of the existing home. It is therefore important for the successful demonstration of the ZEMCH 109 project and for the purpose of this study that a detailed monitoring and a post occupancy evaluation (POE) of the exiting NRGStyle home are performed sufficiently in order to investigate the relationship between energy consumption and the indoor environmental conditions and cross-checked with the accepted standards.

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Citation

Altan, H., Refaee, M., Han, L. and Noguchi, M. (2013), "Measured Home Environment and Energy Consumption Compared to Accepted Standards", Open House International, Vol. 38 No. 3, pp. 64-71. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2013-B0009

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Open House International

Copyright © 2013 Open House International

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