[Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential or Non-Residential?
Maria Karpman
maria.karpman at karpmanconsulting.net
Wed Apr 10 13:28:14 PDT 2013
Yet another perspective is that when high-rise residential buildings are
modeled with Systems 7/8 serving common spaces on each floor, even very
modest proposed designs, such as minimally code compliant PTACs, often show
hefty savings compared to the baseline because many of the prescribed
Appendix G settings and controls misfire (e.g. 0.4 cfm/sf minimum setpoints
for VAV reheat in G3.1.3.13). This is an issue for incentive programs that
use Appendix G protocol, because they end up with some pretty ridiculous
ECMs that on paper qualify for incentives.
Maria
From: Jim Dirkes [mailto:jim at buildingperformanceteam.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 2:34 PM
To: Maria Karpman; 'Dónal O'Connor'; 'Rut Wattanasak'; 'Building Sim Forum'
Subject: RE: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
I vote with Maria and Demba J.
It is, however, very interesting to see all of the different perspectives!
James V Dirkes II, PE, BEMP, LEED AP
<http://www.buildingperformanceteam.com/> www.buildingperformanceteam.com
Energy Analysis, Commissioning & Training Services
1631 Acacia Drive, Grand Rapids, MI 49504 USA
616 450 8653
From: Maria Karpman [mailto:maria.karpman at karpmanconsulting.net]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 2:19 PM
To: 'Dónal O'Connor'; 'Rut Wattanasak'; Jim Dirkes; 'Building Sim Forum'
Subject: RE: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
I second the approach described by Demba. Rut wrote Since your dormitory
building contains some non-residential space types, you shouldn't use the
building type to determine your Baseline, ie it's no longer truly a
residential building type. I disagree that presence of spaces such as
electrical/mechanical rooms, corridors, stairs, multi-purpose rooms, etc.
automatically means that this is not a residential building type. It is hard
to imagine a dormitory, hotel, motel, or multifamily without these, and
System 7/8 is hardly an appropriate baseline for such spaces (there would
have to be a system modeled for each floor).
You should also remember that only the area of conditioned spaces as defined
in 90.1 Section 3 is counted when determining baseline system type (G3.1.1),
so spaces like electrical/mechanical or storage may not have to be factored
in.
Thanks,
Maria
From: bldg-sim-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
[mailto:bldg-sim-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] On Behalf Of Dónal O'Connor
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 2:05 PM
To: Rut Wattanasak; Jim Dirkes; Building Sim Forum
Subject: Re: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
Hi all,
Thank you for your responses thus far.
I did a quick calculation of the areas. Total Residential Floor area is
approx. 75,000 sq. ft. and total Non-residential is approx. 50,000 sq. ft.
The Non-residential areas include the basement, main floor multi-purpose
rooms, lobbies, storage etc, and the common corridors, elec, janitor,
lounge/study areas on Floors 2-9.
So if we are in agreement that the Residential areas are to use either
System 1 or System 2, the next question is what are the Non-residential
areas classified as? From Table G3.1.1A it appears the number of floors take
precedence over the floor area, so as the Non-residential area extends over
10 floors, it should be classified as System 7 or System 8. Am I correct in
saying that the number of floors takes precedence over the floor area?
Thanks again for your help and guidance.
Cheers
Dónal
_____
From: rwattanasak at emoenergy.com
To: jim at buildingperformanceteam.com; oconnor_dj at hotmail.com;
bldg-sim at lists.onebuilding.org
Subject: RE: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2013 17:33:21 +0000
Per the exception noted by Mr Dirkes, I would model the Baseline building
based on Table G3.1.1A; except with the dorm rooms, modeled them with System
1 or 2.
Here is how I come to this decision:
* Since your dormitory building contains some non-residential space
types, you shouldn't use the building type to determine your Baseline, ie
it's no longer truly a residential building type
* Dorm rooms still fall under the residential space type, so use
residential Baseline systems (1 or 2) for those spaces
* "Other building and space types are considered nonresidential" This
statement allows the rest of the building to be modeled per standard
baseline (area, # of floors, energy source).
I see the same thought process applies to the mixed-use
(commercial/apartments) as well. With the rise of mixed-use commercial
building, I'm sure we'll be seeing this type of scenario more often. I
welcome any comments or suggestions.
Thanks,
Rut Wattanasak
LEED AP BD+C
_____
From: bldg-sim-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org on behalf of Jim Dirkes
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 12:53 PM
To: John Aulbach; Dónal O'Connor; Building Sim Forum
Subject: Re: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
However
..
The notes in that table clarify as shown below. I think the notes indicate
that Donals predominant building type is residential. It sounds as
though there are some non-predominant types as well. Take a look at
G3.1.1s Exceptions for a description of those.
>From 90.1-2007 Table G3.1.1A:
Notes:
Residential building types include dormitory, hotel, motel, and multifamily.
Residential space types include guest rooms, living quarters, private living
space, and sleeping quarters. Other
building and space types are considered nonresidential
James V Dirkes II, PE, BEMP, LEED AP
<http://www.buildingperformanceteam.com/> www.buildingperformanceteam.com
Energy Analysis, Commissioning & Training Services
1631 Acacia Drive, Grand Rapids, MI 49504 USA
616 450 8653
From: bldg-sim-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
[mailto:bldg-sim-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] On Behalf Of John Aulbach
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 12:47 PM
To: Dónal O'Connor; Building Sim Forum
Subject: Re: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential
or Non-Residential?
Sir:
If the building is over 5 stories high believe that comes under
Non-Residential. Period.
John Aulbach, PE
From: Dónal O'Connor <oconnor_dj at hotmail.com>
To: Building Sim Forum <bldg-sim at lists.onebuilding.org>
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 9:05 AM
Subject: [Bldg-sim] Definition of a University Dormitory - Residential or
Non-Residential?
Dear Bldg Sim,
I'm looking for guidance on the definition of a University Dormitory
building that I'm modeling under LEED 2009, particularly referencing Table
G3.1.1A Baseline HVAC System Types. The building has 9 storeys above grade
with an underground basement, with a total floor area of approx. 125,000 sq.
ft.
The Basement is primarily crawlspace, electrical, mechanical, student
storage etc.
The Main Floor consists of a number of multi-purpose rooms, further storage
facilities for bicycles, recycling etc, with 1/3 of the main floor plan
dedicated to student residences.
The remaining floors, 2 - 9, are student residences with a number of break
out/study rooms/lounge areas on each floor.
Is the building classified as "Residential", or is it considered
"Nonresidential and More than 5 floors or > 150,000 sq. ft" due to the
basement and main floor spaces not being "Residential"? Will I have to model
the basement and the main floor separate from floors 2-9?
Your help is greatly appreciated.
Cheers
Dónal
_______________________________________________
Bldg-sim mailing list
http://lists.onebuilding.org/listinfo.cgi/bldg-sim-onebuilding.org
To unsubscribe from this mailing list send a blank message to
BLDG-SIM-UNSUBSCRIBE at ONEBUILDING.ORG
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2012.0.2240 / Virus Database: 2641/5736 - Release Date: 04/10/13
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2012.0.2240 / Virus Database: 2641/5736 - Release Date: 04/10/13
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.onebuilding.org/pipermail/bldg-sim-onebuilding.org/attachments/20130410/3f61cafc/attachment-0001.htm>
More information about the Bldg-sim
mailing list