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2023 | Book

Deep Energy Retrofit—Case Studies

Business and Technical Concepts for Deep Energy Retrofit of Public Buildings; Energy in Buildings and Communities Programme; Annex 61, Subtask A

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About this book

This book describes results of research conducted with the goal of providing a framework, selected tools, and guidelines to significantly reduce energy use (by more than 50%) in government and public buildings. The scope of the book is limited to public buildings that were constructed before the 1980s with low internal loads (e.g., office buildings, dormitories, barracks, public housing, and educational buildings) and that were undergoing major renovation. The book contains description and analysis of 26 well-documented case studies from Europe (Austria, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Ireland, Latvia, Montenegro, The Netherlands, and the UK) and the USA. After these data were collected, the case studies were analyzed with respect to energy use (before and after renovation), reasons for undertaking the renovation, co-benefits achieved, resulting cost-effectiveness, and the business models followed. Finally, “lessons learned” were compiled and compared.
Deep Energy Retrofit (DER) is a major building renovation project in which site energy use intensity (including plug loads) has been reduced by at least 50% from the pre-renovation baseline with a corresponding improvement in indoor environmental quality and comfort. Lessons learned from the case studies and experiences of the team clearly indicate that DER can be achieved with the application of “bundles” of a limited number of core technologies readily available on the market. Specific characteristics of some of these core technology bundles generally depend on the technologies available on an individual nation’s market, on the minimum requirements of national standards, and on economics (as determined by a life cycle cost [LCC] analysis).

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Project Summary and Analysis
Abstract
The book “DER Energy Retrofit—Case Studies” contains 26 well-documented case studies from Europe (Austria, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Ireland, Latvia, Montenegro, The Netherlands, United Kingdom) and the United States. After data were collected, the case studies were analyzed with respect to energy use (before and after renovation), reasons for undertaking the renovation, co-benefits achieved, project cost-effectiveness, and the business models used in project implementation. Finally, “lessons learned” were compiled and compared. Based on an extensive literature review and lessons learned from these case studies, the IEA-EBC Annex 61 team has proposed the following definition of the DER:
Deep Energy Retrofit (DER) is a major building renovation project in which site energy use intensity (including plug loads) has been reduced by at least 50% from the pre-renovation baseline with a corresponding improvement in indoor environmental quality and comfort.
Lessons learned from the case studies and experiences of the project team clearly indicate that DER can be achieved with the application of “bundles” of a limited number of core technologies readily available on the market. Specific characteristics of some of these core technology bundles generally depend on the technologies available in an individual nation’s market, on the minimum requirements of national standards, and on economics (as determined by a life cycle cost [LCC] analysis). Also, requirements for building envelope-related technologies (e.g., insulation levels, windows, vapor and water barriers, and requirements for building airtightness) will depend on specific climate conditions. Case studies documented in this book were combined with original research conducted under Annex 61 and information collected from literature research and expert discussions conducted at Annex 61 Industry Forums to develop several guidelines that were published by Springer: “Deep Energy Retrofit—A Guide to Achieving Significant Energy Use Reduction with Major Renovation Projects”, Deep Energy Retrofit Guide for Public Buildings—Business and Financial Models”, which describes business models for DER, project structuring and project financing options, direct cost savings benefits and monetizing of indirect benefits, and macro- and microeconomic barriers for implementation of DER projects in the public building sector and “Deep Energy Retrofit—a Guide for Decision Makers”.
Ruediger Lohse, Ove C. Mørck, Alexander Zhivov
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Deep Energy Retrofit—Case Studies
Editors
Ruediger Lohse
Ove C. Mørck
Alexander Zhivov
Copyright Year
2023
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-17517-6
Print ISBN
978-3-031-17516-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17517-6