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Energy use in multi-family dwellings : measurements and methods of analysis

Bagge, Hans LU (2007)
Abstract
In 2001, multi-family dwellings were built at nine properties in Västra hamnen, Malmö, Sweden. Several well known Swedish architects were involved in designing the buildings, hence they reflect modern architecture. Prior to the inauguration, the buildings were displayed at the international housing exhibition Bo01. The housing exhibition had an ecological and

sustainability focus. Regarding energy use, all buildings were restricted to use no more than 105 kWh/m² annually including space heating, domestic hot water heating, common electricity and household electricity. Different building techniques and technical systems were used at the different properties. A measurement program including hourly measurements of district

... (More)
In 2001, multi-family dwellings were built at nine properties in Västra hamnen, Malmö, Sweden. Several well known Swedish architects were involved in designing the buildings, hence they reflect modern architecture. Prior to the inauguration, the buildings were displayed at the international housing exhibition Bo01. The housing exhibition had an ecological and

sustainability focus. Regarding energy use, all buildings were restricted to use no more than 105 kWh/m² annually including space heating, domestic hot water heating, common electricity and household electricity. Different building techniques and technical systems were used at the different properties. A measurement program including hourly measurements of district

heating, common electricity and household electricity was set up to monitor the energy use of the buildings. The aim of the research project presented in this licentiate dissertation has been to study the energy use at these properties

based on the measurements. Use of district heating, use of domestic hot water heating, assimilation of solar heat gains, use of common electricity and use of household electricity were all studied in detail. Power signatures were used to

make corrections regarding differences in the outdoor climate between the different years and to study the energy use during different conditions. Methods were developed and used to study parameters that were not measured

directly and to study variations in use during the day and during the year. All properties, except one, used more energy than restricted. The variations in total energy use between the different properties were large. There was a factor of

almost three between the lowest and largest use. Solar heat gains were assimilated to different extents at the different properties due to different window areas, orientation of the window areas and the technical systems used.

The variations during the year and during the day in use of household electricity and domestic hot water heating was considerable and this should be taken into account when measured energy use during shorter periods are

compared and when energy simulations are done. Key values are presented that can be used to critically examine different designs, systems and results from energy calculations. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
energy use, multi-family dwellings, district heating, space heating, domestic hot water heating, common electricity, household electricity, solar heat gains.
pages
111 pages
publisher
Byggnadsfysik LTH, Lunds Tekniska Högskola
ISBN
978-91-88722-37-9
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
06cd69d2-01f1-4c2f-a0e5-73e973da2a59 (old id 783296)
alternative location
http://www.byfy.lth.se/fileadmin/byfy/files/TVBH-3000pdf/TVBH-3049HB.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:50:38
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:36:47
@misc{06cd69d2-01f1-4c2f-a0e5-73e973da2a59,
  abstract     = {{In 2001, multi-family dwellings were built at nine properties in Västra hamnen, Malmö, Sweden. Several well known Swedish architects were involved in designing the buildings, hence they reflect modern architecture. Prior to the inauguration, the buildings were displayed at the international housing exhibition Bo01. The housing exhibition had an ecological and<br/><br>
sustainability focus. Regarding energy use, all buildings were restricted to use no more than 105 kWh/m² annually including space heating, domestic hot water heating, common electricity and household electricity. Different building techniques and technical systems were used at the different properties. A measurement program including hourly measurements of district<br/><br>
heating, common electricity and household electricity was set up to monitor the energy use of the buildings. The aim of the research project presented in this licentiate dissertation has been to study the energy use at these properties<br/><br>
based on the measurements. Use of district heating, use of domestic hot water heating, assimilation of solar heat gains, use of common electricity and use of household electricity were all studied in detail. Power signatures were used to<br/><br>
make corrections regarding differences in the outdoor climate between the different years and to study the energy use during different conditions. Methods were developed and used to study parameters that were not measured<br/><br>
directly and to study variations in use during the day and during the year. All properties, except one, used more energy than restricted. The variations in total energy use between the different properties were large. There was a factor of<br/><br>
almost three between the lowest and largest use. Solar heat gains were assimilated to different extents at the different properties due to different window areas, orientation of the window areas and the technical systems used.<br/><br>
The variations during the year and during the day in use of household electricity and domestic hot water heating was considerable and this should be taken into account when measured energy use during shorter periods are<br/><br>
compared and when energy simulations are done. Key values are presented that can be used to critically examine different designs, systems and results from energy calculations.}},
  author       = {{Bagge, Hans}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-88722-37-9}},
  keywords     = {{energy use; multi-family dwellings; district heating; space heating; domestic hot water heating; common electricity; household electricity; solar heat gains.}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Licentiate Thesis}},
  publisher    = {{Byggnadsfysik LTH, Lunds Tekniska Högskola}},
  title        = {{Energy use in multi-family dwellings : measurements and methods of analysis}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4489544/8054930.pdf}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}