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Post occupancy evaluation to assess multifamily residential building energy performance in India

Basu, Chaitali; Paul, Virendra Kumar; Syal, M G Matt; Dandia, Gazal

Authors

Chaitali Basu

Virendra Kumar Paul

M G Matt Syal

Gazal Dandia



Abstract

Post-Occupancy Evaluation (POE) is defined as the process of systematically comparing a building's actual performance measures with explicitly stated performance criteria. POE is widely recognised as being central to addressing the performance gap between design intentions and the actual outcomes of an occupied building. This performance gap is often arising from miscommunication and over-prediction of the building's performance targets in the design stage. This gap also arises due to incorrect methods, tools, and input data for modelling and simulation. Conventionally, the evaluation of housing performance consisted of either physical monitoring or user satisfaction surveys, except that these two do not provide a comprehensive picture. POE is a systematic process for collecting and analyzing occupant feedback. Past research has highlighted occupant's behaviour as a major issue i.e. how occupants operate equipment and how they adjust to the internal conditions that may vary from design assumptions. The primary goal of this research is to evaluate the application of POE to assess an Indian Green Building Council's (IGBC) Green Homes Certified multifamily residential building in India. The building is in the city of Jaipur, a composite climate zone, and its performance gap was assessed one-year post-occupancy. The methodology comprised of performing energy simulation of three cases on eQuest: a Base-case model based on IGBC Green Homes base-case parameters, as-constructed case based on Green Homes Certification parameters, and as-occupied case based on POE data analysis. The annual energy consumption from the simulation of the three cases is compared to measure the performance gap. The findings indicate a very interesting departure from the general observation of the majority of literature which states a negative 'performance gap' or overutilization between base-case, and as-constructed and as-occupied buildings. In this study, a positive performance gap emerges, i.e. the as-occupied building performs better than the as-constructed. The positive performance gap mainly emerges due to variations in occupancy numbers, and occupancy schedules, equipment usage, equipment power density (EPD), and artificial lighting usage and schedules. These indicate a certain change in urban lifestyles. The concept of positive performance gap is an unexplored area of research in residential sector which indicates the significance of occupant feedback. This study provides a basis to further analyze post-occupancy behavioural studies to understand this positive performance gap.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 11, 2019
Online Publication Date Mar 13, 2020
Publication Date Mar 23, 2020
Deposit Date May 2, 2022
Journal OIDA International Journal of Sustainable Development
Print ISSN 0960-1406
Electronic ISSN 1741-5268
Publisher Inderscience
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 3
Pages 25-44
Series ISSN 1923-6662
Keywords Performance gap; Post-occupancy evaluation; Green Buildings; Green Homes; Occupant feedback Annual energy consumption
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/9438558
Publisher URL https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/JELJOUR_Results.cfm?form_name=journalbrowse&journal_id=1650801