How Passive Building Techniques Impact HVAC Systems and Design

How Passive Building Techniques Impact HVAC Systems and Design

Tuesday, November 12, 2024 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM · 1 hr. (America/New_York)
Room 113ABC
Summits

Information

Registration Information:

To register for this course - please reserve your seat for the "Phius Passive Building Summit" located in the Greenbuild agenda.

Registering for the session holds your seat in the class until 5 minutes prior to the scheduled start time. At that time your seat in the session can no longer be guaranteed.

If a workshop or session is full, you will not be able to add it to your agenda; however, if you have the appropriate pass you will be able to enter the session on a first-come first-served basis 5 minutes prior to the scheduled start of the event so long as capacity has not been reached

Greenbuild staff at the entrance of the session have the ability to stop permitting entrance to the session when the room hits the set capacity.

Description:

Meeting Passive House criteria for certification necessitates the HVAC engineer adopt a holistic view of design and embrace an integrative design process. Drivers for passive buildings are a function of the building geometry and the building enclosure. When the HVAC engineer understands the key elements of PH enclosures including the thermal and air barriers, windows and thermal bridging, the appropriate HVAC system will be notably different than traditional HVAC solutions. As engineer-of-record for dozens of large passive projects Petersen will answer the fundamental questions about how the approach of the HVAC engineer is different, and what the impact is on HVAC systems. How is the design process different? The engineer is a participant in reducing heating and cooling requirements for example, by advising the team on what enhances the thermal barrier and what compromises the thermal barrier, by understanding the impact of building geometry, window wall ratio, air-tightness, and thermal bridging. Once feasibility of meeting Passive House four criteria for heating and cooling is established, then HVAC system selection and design that responds to the enclosure performance can occur. What are some of the impacts on HVAC systems? Peak heat loss and heat gain in a PH building are dramatically reduced. The peak loads are well lower than most HVAC engineers have previously seen. Systems for heating and cooling in turn can be significantly downsized and simplified while providing superior occupant comfort. Dedicated outside air systems (DOAS) ventilation systems are carefully designed to provide outside air to all occupied spaces and exhaust an equal amount as supplied via exhaust from sources of odor, contaminants and toxins (in multi-family this is primarily bathrooms and kitchens). More complex systems such as perimeter heat, radiant floors, reheat and sophisticated controls are not necessary in passive house buildings for achieving comfort.

Tuesday Summit Name
Phius Passive Building Summit
Continuing Education Credit Offered
AIA LUGBCIPhius
Pass Type Access
Conference PassStudent PassVolunteer Pass
Learning Objective 1
Understand the fundamental necessity for the HVAC engineer to collaborate closely with the architect and other team members for a successful green building outcome
Learning Objective 2
That for very low energy use buildings understand why the HVAC engineer must have sufficient building enclosure knowledge to be an active contributor to building design elements (eg. building geometry, building enclosure), and not just the HVAC system
Learning Objective 3
Vet HVAC engineers that can design high-performance green buildings that require a wholistic approach and can engage in an integrative process
Learning Objective 4
Understand why optimization of the enclosure and appropriate design of HVAC systems go hand in hand for good green building outcomes
Learning Level
Basic
Greenbuild Program
Phius Passive Building Summit
Does this session cover Justice, Equity, Diversity and/or Inclusion
Yes
Session Format
Lecture