Case studies of high-rise buildings
Tall buildings are being designed and built across a wide range of cities. A poorly designed tall building can tremendously increase the building’s appetite for energy. Therefore, this paper aims to determine the design strategies that help a high-rise office building to be more energy efficient. F...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Delft University of Technology
2018-12-01
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Series: | A+BE: Architecture and the Built Environment |
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Online Access: | https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/abe/article/view/3536 |
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author | Babak Raji Martin J. Tenpierik Andy van den Dobbelsteen |
author_facet | Babak Raji Martin J. Tenpierik Andy van den Dobbelsteen |
author_sort | Babak Raji |
collection | DOAJ |
description |
Tall buildings are being designed and built across a wide range of cities. A poorly designed tall building can tremendously increase the building’s appetite for energy. Therefore, this paper aims to determine the design strategies that help a high-rise office building to be more energy efficient. For this purpose, a comparative study on twelve case buildings in three climate groups (temperate, sub-tropical & tropical) was performed. The exterior envelope, building form and orientation, service core placement, plan layout, and special design elements like atria and sky gardens were the subject of investigation. The effectiveness of different design strategies for reducing the cooling, heating, ventilation and electric lighting energy were analysed. Finally, lessons from these buildings were defined for the three climates. Furthermore, a comparison of building energy performance data with international benchmarks confirmed that in temperate and sub-tropical climates sustainable design strategies for high-rise buildings were performing well, as a result leading to lower energy consumption. However, for the tropics the design of high-rise buildings needs higher concern.
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first_indexed | 2024-04-10T04:17:16Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-8307e6b67a3845f38e43991b3d077b8d |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2212-3202 2214-7233 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-04-10T04:17:16Z |
publishDate | 2018-12-01 |
publisher | Delft University of Technology |
record_format | Article |
series | A+BE: Architecture and the Built Environment |
spelling | doaj.art-8307e6b67a3845f38e43991b3d077b8d2023-03-11T23:02:52ZengDelft University of TechnologyA+BE: Architecture and the Built Environment2212-32022214-72332018-12-0181910.7480/abe.2018.19.3536Case studies of high-rise buildingsBabak Raji0Martin J. Tenpierik1Andy van den Dobbelsteen2TU Delft, Architecture and the Built EnvironmentTU Delft, Architecture and the Built EnvironmentTU Delft, Architecture and the Built Environment Tall buildings are being designed and built across a wide range of cities. A poorly designed tall building can tremendously increase the building’s appetite for energy. Therefore, this paper aims to determine the design strategies that help a high-rise office building to be more energy efficient. For this purpose, a comparative study on twelve case buildings in three climate groups (temperate, sub-tropical & tropical) was performed. The exterior envelope, building form and orientation, service core placement, plan layout, and special design elements like atria and sky gardens were the subject of investigation. The effectiveness of different design strategies for reducing the cooling, heating, ventilation and electric lighting energy were analysed. Finally, lessons from these buildings were defined for the three climates. Furthermore, a comparison of building energy performance data with international benchmarks confirmed that in temperate and sub-tropical climates sustainable design strategies for high-rise buildings were performing well, as a result leading to lower energy consumption. However, for the tropics the design of high-rise buildings needs higher concern. https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/abe/article/view/3536design strategies for energy efficient tall buildingsbuilding energy performancesustainability and climate type |
spellingShingle | Babak Raji Martin J. Tenpierik Andy van den Dobbelsteen Case studies of high-rise buildings A+BE: Architecture and the Built Environment design strategies for energy efficient tall buildings building energy performance sustainability and climate type |
title | Case studies of high-rise buildings |
title_full | Case studies of high-rise buildings |
title_fullStr | Case studies of high-rise buildings |
title_full_unstemmed | Case studies of high-rise buildings |
title_short | Case studies of high-rise buildings |
title_sort | case studies of high rise buildings |
topic | design strategies for energy efficient tall buildings building energy performance sustainability and climate type |
url | https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/abe/article/view/3536 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT babakraji casestudiesofhighrisebuildings AT martinjtenpierik casestudiesofhighrisebuildings AT andyvandendobbelsteen casestudiesofhighrisebuildings |