Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate

There is a global concern about energy in buildings generally for two major reasons. The first one is to minimise the energy consumption in buildings, while the other is to provide thermally comfortable buildings with minimum energy usage. Most of the work carried out in buildings was in office as w...

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Main Authors: Alwetaishi, M., Gadi, Mohamed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogent OA 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/
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author Alwetaishi, M.
Gadi, Mohamed
author_facet Alwetaishi, M.
Gadi, Mohamed
author_sort Alwetaishi, M.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description There is a global concern about energy in buildings generally for two major reasons. The first one is to minimise the energy consumption in buildings, while the other is to provide thermally comfortable buildings with minimum energy usage. Most of the work carried out in buildings was in office as well as domestic sector. However, the limited publication was done in educational buildings generally. The significance of this research is to take into consideration the energy pattern in a school building in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The research is going to use TAS EDSL computer modelling with its validation. TAS is one of the most commonly used software globally to predict energy building performance. In addition to that, the school will be visited for monitoring. Several types of advanced tools will be used to measure indoor air temperature, relative humidity and much more. This investigation shows that the utilisation of natural ventilation has a major impact on internal temperatures. It has lowered the minimum by 6°C and also lowered the maximum by 3°C. In addition to that, there is a noticeable influence on the top classroom which has its roof exposed to the outdoors. Such outcomes can serve the new vision of Saudi Arabia 2030 and aid to improve the reliance of its buildings on energy.
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spelling nottingham-511672018-04-16T14:03:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/ Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate Alwetaishi, M. Gadi, Mohamed There is a global concern about energy in buildings generally for two major reasons. The first one is to minimise the energy consumption in buildings, while the other is to provide thermally comfortable buildings with minimum energy usage. Most of the work carried out in buildings was in office as well as domestic sector. However, the limited publication was done in educational buildings generally. The significance of this research is to take into consideration the energy pattern in a school building in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The research is going to use TAS EDSL computer modelling with its validation. TAS is one of the most commonly used software globally to predict energy building performance. In addition to that, the school will be visited for monitoring. Several types of advanced tools will be used to measure indoor air temperature, relative humidity and much more. This investigation shows that the utilisation of natural ventilation has a major impact on internal temperatures. It has lowered the minimum by 6°C and also lowered the maximum by 3°C. In addition to that, there is a noticeable influence on the top classroom which has its roof exposed to the outdoors. Such outcomes can serve the new vision of Saudi Arabia 2030 and aid to improve the reliance of its buildings on energy. Cogent OA 2018-03-28 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/1/Toward%20sustainable%20school%20building%20design%20A%20case%20study%20in%20hot%20and%20humid%20climate.pdf Alwetaishi, M. and Gadi, Mohamed (2018) Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate. Cogent Engineering, 5 . p. 1452665. ISSN 2331-1916 building fabric; school buildings; natural ventilation; hot and humid climate;energy building https://www.cogentoa.com/article/10.1080/23311916.2018.1452665 https://doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2018.1452665 https://doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2018.1452665
spellingShingle building fabric; school buildings; natural ventilation; hot and humid climate;energy building
Alwetaishi, M.
Gadi, Mohamed
Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title_full Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title_fullStr Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title_full_unstemmed Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title_short Toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
title_sort toward sustainable school building design: a case study in hot and humid climate
topic building fabric; school buildings; natural ventilation; hot and humid climate;energy building
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51167/