Abstract
An overview is given of the state-of-the-art of natural and hybrid ventilation in buildings in general. The focus of this paper is on boundary conditions for openable windows. As a case study the Co Creation Centre at the TU-Delft is discussed. Occupants live in their own houses and often in an office or other working environments as well. Due to the development of working on a distance, accelerated by the COVID-pandemics, they generally have more choice which environment is the best. That is why a holistic approach is necessary for buildings in general and houses. Natural ventilation offers a wide range of low-cost opportunities to realize the required thermal comfort and need of fresh air. Boundary conditions for ventilation are the limitation of cooling and heating by intelligent building physical design of the façade or roof, with better balancing heat loss due to transmission and heat gain by solar access. In this field there is still a lack of knowledge at many professionals. In most cases natural ventilation has to be supported by robust mechanical systems. Effective integration is a rather new field of research, learning from the past. Current examples of integration are discussed, in which BMS-systems play a key role.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Journal of Business Management and Economics Statistics |
Volume | 1 |
Issue number | 101 |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Funding
The research is partly financed via a public grant of the Rijksdienst voor Ondernemend Nederland (RVO) within the Urban Energy 2018 research-line. Currently follow-up research is running based on a grant of the ministry of Economic Affairs, Top-sector Energy.Keywords
- Natural and hybrid ventilation
- Openable windows
- Covid protection
- Resilience concept
- Robustness
- Natural resources
- Buildings
- Natural ventilation
- Climate