scholarly journals Developing a process-oriented approach towards Positive Energy Blocks: the wind-analysis contribution

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurizio Sibilla

AbstractPositive Energy Block (PEB) is an emerging paradigm to transform cities into low carbon cities. It is expected that buildings will become the main components of the future energy infrastructure. This scenario demands a structural integration of the cyclical environmental variables in designing our buildings and cities as a whole. However, such an integration continue to be rare due to the dominance of object-oriented approaches. This study contributes to reducing these difficulties by developing a process-oriented approach, focusing on the wind contribution. The assumption posed herein is that the transition towards PEBs should be an opportunity to redefine the rules to organise the built environment structure integrating energy and urban environmental qualities. A case study, involving three public school buildings located in three different urban patterns in Rome, illustrates a preliminary step in developing an integrated platform to orient strategic design solutions towards PEBs. This is done by developing and assessing three indexes: wind form index, wind thermal-loss index, and wind energy production index. The results point out the usability and limits concerning the approach adopted, stressing the relevance of an integrated platform to support decision-makers in planning the agenda to transform buildings as components of PEBs.

Buildings ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 78
Author(s):  
Daria Uspenskaia ◽  
Karl Specht ◽  
Hendrik Kondziella ◽  
Thomas Bruckner

Without decarbonizing cities energy and climate objectives cannot be achieved as cities account for approximately two thirds of energy consumption and emissions. This goal of decarbonizing cities has to be facilitated by promoting net-zero/positive energy buildings and districts and replicating them, driving cities towards sustainability goals. Many projects in smart cities demonstrate novel and groundbreaking low-carbon solutions in demonstration and lighthouse projects. However, as the historical, geographic, political, social and economic context of urban areas vary greatly, it is not always easy to repeat the solution in another city or even district. It is therefore important to look for the opportunities to scale up or repeat successful pilots. The purpose of this paper is to explore common trends in technologies and replication strategies for positive energy buildings or districts in smart city projects, based on the practical experience from a case study in Leipzig—one of the lighthouse cities in the project SPARCS. One of the key findings the paper has proven is the necessity of a profound replication modelling to deepen the understanding of upscaling processes. Three models analyzed in this article are able to provide a multidimensional representation of the solution to be replicated.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Dave Harbour ◽  
J. Kracik ◽  
David Ford

2020 ◽  
pp. 393-427
Author(s):  
E. Jeffrey Conklin ◽  
KC Burgess-Yakemovic

Author(s):  
Franklin Bernal ◽  
Jorge Maldonado-Mahauad ◽  
Klinge Villalba-Condori ◽  
Miguel Zúñiga-Prieto ◽  
Jaime Veintimilla-Reyes ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 98.2-98
Author(s):  
N. Curatolo ◽  
J. Assoukpa ◽  
A. Desnoyer ◽  
R. Haddad ◽  
C. Courtin ◽  
...  

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