Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Guidelines for Selecting an Energy Analyst

Ask firms these 10 questions to determine if they’re the right fit for your team
When you have decided to select an energy analyst to compliment your project team, understanding what energy analysis is will help ensure that you select a qualified professional.

Energy analysis in its broadest definition helps evaluate the energy performance of buildings and equipment through both direct metering and measurement (also called monitoring and verification) and computer simulation. Energy analysis encompasses daylighting analysis and commissioning.
Within the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) framework, energy analysis typically incorporates modeling for optimizing and predicting:


  • Energy performance, including HVAC, lighting, water, daylighting, and building-envelope analysis.

  • Thermal performance.

  • Ventilation effectiveness.

  • Occupant comfort.

  • Life-cycle-cost analysis.

In addition, it encompasses metering and energy analysis for ongoing monitoring and verification of building systems and calculations related to water efficiency and indoor environmental quality.


Other related areas of energy analysis and modeling include modeling of urban heat islands and urban-air-shed modeling.


The majority of energy analysis in the LEED program centers around completing a "building energy simulation model." This refers to a commercially available software program that performs hour-by-hour simulation of a building. It incorporates all building-envelope, building-system, schedule, utility-rate, cost, and weather data.


A building simulation model is required work to earn up to 20 LEED points. A computer model helps architects and engineers find the best combination of material and systems for a given set of project-specific goals, but it does not necessarily guarantee an energy-efficient building. It is a prospecting tool that, in the hands of a dedicated and experienced user, can indicate which combination of building strategies is most likely to produce a building that is energy-efficient, has the desired thermal performance, and is a comfortable and healthy environment in which to live and/or work. A properly constructed model will allow the design team to vary several different aspects of the construction and evaluate the impact these changes would have on the economic and environmental bottom line.


Firms specializing in mechanical engineering, electrical (lighting and daylighting) engineering, commissioning, or energy management are good places to start when looking for a qualified energy analyst. A firm dedicated to energy analysis may have depth of knowledge and experience in evaluating a wide range of project energy issues.


Questions to Ask When selecting an energy analyst, review the general guidelines for selecting a green design professional (see "Steps to Selecting a Sustainability Professional," HPAC Engineering, October 2011, http://bit.ly/sustainpro). Then review the 10 questions specific to energy analysis below. This guide will help you conduct a thorough selection process.


Read the 10 Questions at http://hpac.com/columns/managing-facilities/guidelines-selecting-energy-analyst-1211/

Consultant Releases Annual List of Green-Building ‘MegaTrends’

Despite ongoing economic difficulties in most developed countries, the global rebound of green building will continue in 2012, green-building and sustainability consultant Jerry Yudelson predicts in his annual list of top 10 green-building “MegaTrends.”

“What we’re seeing is that more people are building green each year, and there is nothing on the horizon that will stop this MegaTrend or its constituent elements,” Yudelson, chief executive officer of Tucson, Ariz.-based Yudelson Associates, says.

Following is Yudelson’s list of the top 10 green-building trends for 2012, gleaned, he said, from conversations with green-building-industry leaders in the United States, Canada, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Australia over the past year:

1. Green building in North America will rebound in 2012. “In 2010 and 2011, the continuing slowdown in commercial real estate and the end of federal recovery funding put a crimp in new green-building projects,” Yudelson, author of 12 books on green building, says. But while the growth rate of new green-building projects fell dramatically in 2010 and 2011, domestic Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design- (LEED-) project registrations are up almost 40 percent over 2010 levels. “We see faster growth in green retrofits and notice that ongoing college and university projects and NGO (non-governmental organization) activity are serving to backstop the fall in commercial and governmental construction,” Yudelson says.

2. Green building will continue to benefit from the Obama administration’s strengthened focus on greening the executive branch, which includes a commitment to a minimum of LEED Gold certification for all federal projects and a concentration on major energy-efficiency renovations.

To read the others, visit http://hpac.com/news/megatrends-2012/.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Regional Planning Grant Award

Omaha-Council Bluffs Metropolitan Area Planning Agency (MAPA) will be awarded $2,045,000 to develop a Regional Plan for Sustainable Development. The plan will include the development of several scenarios for future growth that represent different ways of achieving equilibrium between the goals of equity, environmental sustainability, and economic growth in the future development of the Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan region.

The scenarios will be developed through an extensive community engagement process at the regional, local, and neighborhood scales.

Anticipated Project Benefits: Provide citizens, policy-makers, and providers of public services with a clear and comprehensive vision, based in shared community values, of how the region should develop over the next 40 years. Illuminate the workings of the many systems that support the region and the ways in which they complement and compete with one another Grapple with ways of improving governance and the delivery of services that enhance regional livability and narrow persistent disparities in the community.
Funding Amount: $ 2,045,000

Core Partners: Nebraska: Douglas, Sarpy, Washington, and Saunders Counties; Omaha, Bellevue, La Vista, Gretna, Papillion, Blair. Iowa: Pottawattamie, Mills, and Harrison Counties; Council Bluffs

HUD Region: 7

Congressional District: NE-002

http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2011/HUDNo.11-274