LAPSE:2023.22248
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.22248
The Performance Gap in Energy-Efficient Office Buildings: How the Occupants Can Help?
March 23, 2023
Abstract
Rising demand and limited production of electricity are instrumental in spreading the awareness of cautious energy use, leading to the global demand for energy-efficient buildings. This compels the construction industry to smartly design and effectively construct these buildings to ensure energy performance as per design expectations. However, the research tells a different tale: energy-efficient buildings have performance issues. Among several reasons behind the energy performance gap, occupant behavior is critical. The occupant behavior is dynamic and changes over time under formal and informal influences, but the traditional energy simulation programs assume it as static throughout the occupancy. Effective behavioral interventions can lead to optimized energy use. To find out the energy-saving potential based on simulated modified behavior, this study gathers primary building and occupant data from three energy-efficient office buildings in major cities of Pakistan and categorizes the occupants into high, medium, and low energy consumers. Additionally, agent-based modeling simulates the change in occupant behavior under the direct and indirect interventions over a three-year period. Finally, energy savings are quantified to highlight a 25.4% potential over the simulation period. This is a unique attempt at quantifying the potential impact on energy usage due to behavior modification which will help facility managers to plan and execute necessary interventions and software experts to develop effective tools to model the dynamic usage behavior. This will also help policymakers in devising subtle but effective behavior training strategies to reduce energy usage. Such behavioral retrofitting comes at a much lower cost than the physical or technological retrofit options to achieve the same purpose and this study establishes the foundation for it.
Rising demand and limited production of electricity are instrumental in spreading the awareness of cautious energy use, leading to the global demand for energy-efficient buildings. This compels the construction industry to smartly design and effectively construct these buildings to ensure energy performance as per design expectations. However, the research tells a different tale: energy-efficient buildings have performance issues. Among several reasons behind the energy performance gap, occupant behavior is critical. The occupant behavior is dynamic and changes over time under formal and informal influences, but the traditional energy simulation programs assume it as static throughout the occupancy. Effective behavioral interventions can lead to optimized energy use. To find out the energy-saving potential based on simulated modified behavior, this study gathers primary building and occupant data from three energy-efficient office buildings in major cities of Pakistan and categorizes the occupants into high, medium, and low energy consumers. Additionally, agent-based modeling simulates the change in occupant behavior under the direct and indirect interventions over a three-year period. Finally, energy savings are quantified to highlight a 25.4% potential over the simulation period. This is a unique attempt at quantifying the potential impact on energy usage due to behavior modification which will help facility managers to plan and execute necessary interventions and software experts to develop effective tools to model the dynamic usage behavior. This will also help policymakers in devising subtle but effective behavior training strategies to reduce energy usage. Such behavioral retrofitting comes at a much lower cost than the physical or technological retrofit options to achieve the same purpose and this study establishes the foundation for it.
Record ID
Keywords
agent-based modeling, Energy Efficiency, energy performance gap, energy savings, occupant behavior
Subject
Suggested Citation
Ali Q, Thaheem MJ, Ullah F, Sepasgozar SME. The Performance Gap in Energy-Efficient Office Buildings: How the Occupants Can Help?. (2023). LAPSE:2023.22248
Author Affiliations
Ali Q: Department of Construction Engineering and Management, National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), Islamabad 44000, Pakistan
Thaheem MJ: School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3220, Australia [ORCID]
Ullah F: Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Kensington Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia [ORCID]
Sepasgozar SME: Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Kensington Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia [ORCID]
Thaheem MJ: School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3220, Australia [ORCID]
Ullah F: Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Kensington Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia [ORCID]
Sepasgozar SME: Faculty of Built Environment, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Kensington Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia [ORCID]
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
13
Issue
6
Article Number
E1480
Year
2020
Publication Date
2020-03-20
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en13061480, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2023.22248
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https://doi.org/10.3390/en13061480
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Mar 23, 2023
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