That’s How It Works! Replacing the Student Housing Complex in the Olympic Village, Munich

2021 ◽  
pp. 105-114
Author(s):  
Natalie Heger
Author(s):  
Joseph Piacenza ◽  
Salvador Mayoral ◽  
Sean Lin ◽  
Lauren Won ◽  
Xava Grooms

As sustainable building mandates become more prevalent in new commercial buildings, it is a challenge to create a broad, one-size-fits-all certification process. While designers can estimate energy usage with computation tools such as model based design, anticipating the post occupancy usage is more difficult. Understanding energy usage trends is especially complicated in university student housing buildings, where occupancy varies significantly as a function of enrollment and course scheduling. This research explores the effect of student occupancy on both predicted and actual energy usage in a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum certified student housing complex. A case study is presented from the California State University Fullerton (CSUF) campus, and examines diversity factor, defined as a building’s instantaneous energy usage as a percentage of the maximum allowable usage during a period of time, trends throughout the academic year. The CSUF case diversity factor is compared to the diversity factor used in predictive models for obtaining LEED certification, and the mandates that govern the models (e.g., ASHRAE 90.1). The results of the analysis show the benefits of considering post occupancy usage in sustainable building designs, and recommendations are presented for creating unique and application based computational models, early in the design process. This research has broad applications, and can extend to sustainable building design in other organizations, whose operational schedule falls outside of current prediction methods for sustainability mandates.


Author(s):  
Joseph Piacenza ◽  
Salvador Mayoral ◽  
Bahaa Albarhami ◽  
Sean Lin

As sustainable building mandates become more prevalent in new commercial and mixed use buildings, it is a challenge to create a broad, one-size-fits-all certification process. While designers can estimate energy usage with computational tools such as model based design, anticipating the post occupancy usage is more challenging. Understanding and predicting energy usage trends is especially complicated in unique mixed use building applications, such as university student housing buildings, where occupancy varies significantly as a function of enrollment, course scheduling, and student study habits. This research explores a computational modeling approach used to achieve LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum certification for a student housing complex design. A case study is presented from the California State University, Fullerton (CSUF) campus, and examines the impact of post occupancy building usage trends, and diversity factor, defined as a building’s instantaneous energy usage normalized by the maximum allowable usage, on energy use estimates. The CSUF case model, which was originally created using EnergySoft’s EnergyPro 5 software, is examined. An annual predictive energy use comparison is performed in EnergyPro 5 using general building design mandates (i.e., ASHRAE 90.1, California Title 24), and CSUF case specific building usage details (e.g., student scheduling, diversity factor). In addition, the energy usage estimates of these two predictive models are compared to the actual usage data collected during the 2014 academic year. The results of this comparison show the benefits of considering post occupancy usage, and recommendations are presented for creating unique and application based computational models, early in the design process. This research has broad applications, and can extend to sustainable building design in other organizations, whose operational schedule falls outside of current prediction methods for sustainability mandates.


1980 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 635-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack L. Nasar

This study investigated the relationship between familiarity with neighborhood environments and preference for them. Color photographs, eight each from two married student housing complex neighborhoods, were presented to residents of each complex to classify in terms of pleasantness, interestingness and familiarity, χ2 tests were used to analyze the data. As was expected, residents evaluated scenes proximate to them as more familiar than distant scenes. All respondents evaluated one neighborhood as more pleasant and more interesting than the other. Nevertheless, evaluations were also influenced by familiarity such that familiarity was related to a decrement in interest and an increment in pleasantness. Familiarity's likely association with a decrease in perceived complexity may well have produced less interest. On the other hand, it is likely that the hedonic response associated with familiarity produced an increment in rated pleasantness. Thus, the positive feelings for familiarity overpowered the negative affect associated with decreased environmental complexity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-72
Author(s):  
Joko Adianto ◽  
Rossa Turpuk Gabe ◽  
Dwiki Febri Ristanto ◽  
Antony Sihombing

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. German ◽  
C. Bell ◽  
B. Dakin ◽  
M. Hoeschele

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