Building facades: sustainability, maintenance and refurbishment
Building facades: sustainability, maintenance and refurbishment
The UK has a fairly mature building stock with between 1 and 5 % of new buildings being introduced each year. The development of new façade solutions which can respond to the needs of the occupants of both new and refurbished buildings is therefore a key area for development. The built environment is a major consumer of energy across the domestic, industrial and service sectors.
The construction and operation of buildings are responsible for about one-third of the energy use and one-half of the electricity use in most industrialised countries. A large share of the energy use is associated with protection from the external climate and operation of systems necessary to give the occupants a comfortable indoor environment. Natural light is seen as a key driver to people’s well being both in the workplace and at a home. However, to realise high daylight factors in offices on overcast days in particular requires highly glazed facades. Single glazed windows result in high winter month heat loads, whereas modern double or triple glazed units could result in summer overheating without additional solar protection or ventilation.
This paper discusses the issue of façade refurbishment or replacement in the UK for multi-occupancy buildings in both the commercial and domestic sectors. Sustainability is considered from people, process and product perspectives for traditionally glazed façades in comparison to double skin façades and climatic envelopes.
building structure and design, design methods and aids, maintenance and inspection
89-95
Kaluarachchi, Y.
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Jones, K.
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James, P.
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Jentsch, M.
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Bahaj, A.B.
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Clements-Croome, D.
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Gann, D.
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1 June 2005
Kaluarachchi, Y.
fc8086bb-996e-49e9-9bb4-07245eb4acb5
Jones, K.
70f8389b-1e3d-48d0-a7aa-021f164a4c88
James, P.
da0be14a-aa63-46a7-8646-a37f9a02a71b
Jentsch, M.
c3be9da0-453d-4e1d-8620-0cf5873ce501
Bahaj, A.B.
a64074cc-2b6e-43df-adac-a8437e7f1b37
Clements-Croome, D.
288fac92-0e02-4cd2-b04b-4116be052107
Gann, D.
58fc119d-9f92-43f4-95f5-6582772c91ea
Kaluarachchi, Y., Jones, K., James, P., Jentsch, M., Bahaj, A.B., Clements-Croome, D. and Gann, D.
(2005)
Building facades: sustainability, maintenance and refurbishment.
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability, 158 (2), .
(doi:10.1680/ensu.158.2.89.67119).
Abstract
The UK has a fairly mature building stock with between 1 and 5 % of new buildings being introduced each year. The development of new façade solutions which can respond to the needs of the occupants of both new and refurbished buildings is therefore a key area for development. The built environment is a major consumer of energy across the domestic, industrial and service sectors.
The construction and operation of buildings are responsible for about one-third of the energy use and one-half of the electricity use in most industrialised countries. A large share of the energy use is associated with protection from the external climate and operation of systems necessary to give the occupants a comfortable indoor environment. Natural light is seen as a key driver to people’s well being both in the workplace and at a home. However, to realise high daylight factors in offices on overcast days in particular requires highly glazed facades. Single glazed windows result in high winter month heat loads, whereas modern double or triple glazed units could result in summer overheating without additional solar protection or ventilation.
This paper discusses the issue of façade refurbishment or replacement in the UK for multi-occupancy buildings in both the commercial and domestic sectors. Sustainability is considered from people, process and product perspectives for traditionally glazed façades in comparison to double skin façades and climatic envelopes.
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Published date: 1 June 2005
Keywords:
building structure and design, design methods and aids, maintenance and inspection
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 39486
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/39486
ISSN: 1478-4629
PURE UUID: c3a50f8c-a340-47cc-a486-4988c98c1345
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Date deposited: 28 Jun 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:45
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Author:
Y. Kaluarachchi
Author:
K. Jones
Author:
M. Jentsch
Author:
D. Clements-Croome
Author:
D. Gann
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