This summer five members of the CBE community received recognition for conference papers and career contributions, plust travel funding to support conference participation. Three of the awards were presented at the 2024 ASHRAE Annual Conference, and two at Indoor Air 2024. The recipients are Gail Brager, Carlos Duarte, Riwayat Katia, Paul Raftery and Ruiji Sun. We invite you to see our recent post to read about these well-deserved awards and the efforts leading to them. https://lnkd.in/gCnJWBMh
Center for the Built Environment (CBE)
研究服务
Berkeley,California 3,184 位关注者
CBE at UC Berkeley works with industry leaders to deliver research on building design and technology.
关于我们
Our mission is to improve the design, operation, and environmental quality of buildings by providing timely, unbiased information on building technologies and design techniques. Our projects fall into two broad program areas: First, our research team and industry partners are developing ways to "take the pulse" of occupied buildings - looking at how people use space, asking them what they like and don't like about their indoor environment, and linking these responses to physical measurements of indoor environmental quality. This feedback is highly valuable those who manage, operate, and design buildings. Secondly, we are studying technologies that hold promise for making buildings more environmentally friendly, more productive to work in, and more economical to operate. This helps our manufacturing partners to target their product offerings, and facility management and design partners to apply these new technologies effectively.
- 网站
-
https://cbe.berkeley.edu/
Center for the Built Environment (CBE)的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 研究服务
- 规模
- 11-50 人
- 总部
- Berkeley,California
- 类型
- 教育机构
- 创立
- 1997
地点
-
主要
Wurster Hall
US,California,Berkeley,94720
Center for the Built Environment (CBE)员工
-
David Lehrer
Catalyzing University/Industry Research on Building Design and Technology | Licensed Architect & Author
-
Paul Raftery
Professional Researcher at the Center for the Built Environment, University of California Berkeley
-
Carlos Duarte
Assistant Professional Researcher at Center for the Built Environment, UC Berkeley
-
Alessandra Luna Navarro
Assistant Professor, TU Delft | Co-founder at Building Impulse | Visiting Scholar CBE UC Berkeley
动态
-
Thank you Katherine Exss Cid for spending time and sharing your insights with our team. We are grateful to you and so many visiting scholars who add much value to our center.
Dise?adora y académica en la Escuela de Arquitectura y Dise?o PUCV, en la línea de dise?o de interacción y en el área de investigación de Forma, Cultura y Tecnología.
Con mucha alegría les comparto el segundo artículo de mi investigación doctoral, que se enfoca en la evaluación de usabilidad de 3 tecnologías personales de confort térmico con personas con discapacidad intelectual en Chile. Este artículo me llena de orgullo por varios motivos: Primero, porque se enfoca en aspectos de dise?o de interacción en relación al entorno construido, un tema poco cubierto en los estudios de confort térmico. Segundo, porque pone a las personas con discapacidad intelectual en el centro del estudio, lo cual es cada vez más importante considerando que la vida independiente es ahora una opción real y promovida en sus vidas. Y tercero, porque el análisis y resultados de esta investigación fueron realizados durante mi pasantía en Center for the Built Environment (CBE) donde conocí a Alessandra Luna Navarro quien es co-autora de este trabajo y con quien creo que construiremos muchas más colaboraciones en el futuro. El artículo está abierto para su descarga gratuita durante los primeros 30 días. *** I am very pleased to share the second article from my doctoral research, which focuses on a usability evaluation of three personal thermal comfort systems with people with intellectual disabilities in Chile. This article fills me with pride for several reasons: First, because it focuses on interaction design and usability related to the built environment, a topic that is rarely covered in thermal comfort studies. Second, because it places people with intellectual disabilities at the center of the study, which is increasingly important given that independent living is now a real and promoted option in their lives. And third, because the analysis and results of this research were conducted during my research visit at the Center for the Built Environment (CBE), where I met Alessandra Luna Navarro, who is a co-author of this work and with whom I believe we will build many more collaborations in the future. The article is available for free download for the first 30 days. https://lnkd.in/gBn5REAe
Usability of personalized thermal control systems by people with intellectual disabilities in energy poverty
sciencedirect.com
-
A newly published paper reports on a study in a zero-energy building in Singapore that compared cooling using a radiant system to an air system. While previous research by CBE and others shows that hydronic radiant systems show potential for creating highly efficient space conditioning, this new work is significant as less research has been done in tropical regions, including those experiencing rapid population growth and urbanization. The study showed that comfort was good in both cases, with about 60% of the test subjects being satisfied with thermal conditions at a temperature of 26°C (79°F).?However, energy performance varied as the radiant system extracted 33% more heat from the space, requiring less power for moving cooling fluid and air. The radiant system used 4% less energy than the air system at 26°C (79°F)?and 34% less energy at 23°C (73°F). Key contributors include Jiayu Li,?Jovan Pantelic,?Coleman B. Merchant Kian Wee Chen,?Ippei Izuhara,?Ryosuke Yuki,?Forrest Meggers and Stefano Schiavon. ? https://lnkd.in/gbvBdVmA #radiant #HVAC #ZEB #buildingscience
-
Center for the Built Environment (CBE)转发了
Cities are getting hotter. Can buildings and neighborhoods be designed to bring in more wind?
Cities are getting hotter.?Designing them to be windier could help
fastcompany.com
-
A newly published paper reports on a study in a zero-energy building in Singapore that compared cooling using a radiant system to an air system. While previous research by CBE and others shows that hydronic radiant systems show potential for creating highly efficient space conditioning, this work is significant as less research has been done in tropical regions, including those experiencing rapid population growth and urbanization. The study showed that comfort was good in both cases, with about 60% of the test subjects being satisfied with thermal conditions at a temperature of 26°C (79°F).?However, energy performance varied as the radiant system extracted 33% more heat from the space, requiring less power for moving cooling fluid and air. The radiant system used 4% less energy than the air system at 26°C (79°F)?and 34% less energy at 23°C (73°F). The radiant panel system used in the study, from CBE consortium member Sanken Setubi Kogyo Co.,Ltd (https://skk.jp/en/) and its US subsidiary @Global Environmental Technologies Inc., has a unique convection-enhanced design that is intended to improve performance. (CBE previously reported that this system was included in the renovation of CBE’s Controlled Environment Chamber: https://lnkd.in/gAM9_B8A) The key contributors include Jiayu Li,? Jovan Pantelic, Coleman B. Merchant, Kian Wee Chen,?Ippei Izuhara,?Ryosuke Yuki,?Forrest Meggers and Stefano Schiavon. Full citation and link to paper: Li, Jiayu, et al. (2024) 'Comparison of the Environmental, Energy, and Thermal Comfort Performance of Air and Radiant Cooling Systems in a Zero-Energy Office Building in Singapore.' Energy and Buildings, 318: 114487. https://lnkd.in/gvMCY3bG
-
CBE's research team is excited to collaborate with CIEE and this team of building industry leaders. Initial work will be presented at CBE's Industry Advisory Board meeting in October, and people are welcome to post below or message us if you would like to receive updates on these topics.
CIEE, in partnership with the Center for the Built Environment (CBE), has been awarded two major grants, totaling approximately $8 million, from the California Energy Commission to advance research on commercial building #decarbonization. ?? The first project will demonstrate how hospitals can cost-effectively reduce #CarbonEmissions through heat recovery chiller retrofits. Dr. Therese Peffer, the associate director of CIEE and the CITRIS Climate initiative, and Dr. Paul Raftery will lead the project; Taylor Engineers and Berkeley Lab will serve as key collaborators. The second project will use novel technologies to develop Personal Comfort Devices that improve indoor comfort, #energy savings, and #resilience. Therese and Dr. Hui Zhang will lead a multidisciplinary team from Berkeley Lab, the University of Notre Dame, Arup, TRC Companies, Inc., and Normal Software. ?? Read more: bit.ly/ciee-cbe-cec-award University of California, Berkeley | CITRIS and the Banatao Institute | UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design
-
Architecture and other environmental design educators, please take note of these new resources available for your use. #architecture #design UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design
EXPERIENTIAL DESIGN TEACHING To all educators – I am excited to share some of my teaching materials for others to use as it suits your purpose (see links below).?They are from a course I developed at UC Berkeley called Sensory Space based primarily, but not exclusively, on my new book Experiential Design Schemas, co-authored with Mark DeKay and published by ORO Editions. This course is about how to create rich multisensory experiences in buildings through climate-responsive approaches, connecting people to nature and embracing the value of environmental variability and delight. It advocates for design to embrace a broader view of experiential aesthetics, choreographing visual, thermal, acoustic, and olfactory elements of the sensescape to contribute to the beauty and memorability of space. The documents include a Syllabus, Homework Assignments, and In-Class Exercises. They are intentionally posted as Word docs to make it easier for you to use in whole or part. Please note attribution to Gail Brager and to the book if you use it. ?If you adapt or modify this assignment, I'd love to hear about it and see your version. For feedback or to share your work, please contact Gail Brager at [email protected] For docs, see Box folder, Experiential Design Teaching: https://lnkd.in/gRvuFhNX I suggest you start with the Index of Materials, which has links to each of the docs: https://lnkd.in/gtvazs3K To learn more about the book (available online at multiple outlets): https://lnkd.in/gtym9z-s
-
This new paper, completed in collaboration with our friends at the University of Sydney, builds on earlier research to further disprove the idea that there is one ideal temperature that leads to peak productivity. As with many indoor environmental questions, there is no one-size-fits-all solution.
?? New Research Alert! Do Typical Indoor Air Temperatures (23, 25, 27 and 29°C) Affect Work Performance? No?. We conducted an experimental study with 58 participants to explore the impact of indoor temperature on office work performance. The results? Our results showed that office work performance remained consistent across all tested temperatures, despite some participants experiencing thermal discomfort at the higher temperatures.?Learn more here: https://lnkd.in/ebxXMp62 Reference: Jose Ali Porras-Salazar, Federico Tartarini and Stefano Schiavon, 2024. The effect of indoor temperature on work performance of fifty-eight people in a simulated office environment. Building and Environment, p.111813. #IndoorEnvironment #WorkPerformance #ThermalComfort #Research #EnergyEfficiency Singapore Berkeley Building Efficiency and Sustainability in the Tropics (SinBerBEST), University of Costa Rica, University of Sydney, Center for the Built Environment (CBE).
Do Typical Indoor Air Temperatures Affect Work Performance? No? | Dr Federico Tartarini
federicotartarini.github.io
-
This spring CBE’s research team was awarded two large grants from the California Energy Commission. Both projects are multi-year efforts, each with a wide range of research activities and deliverables, and they leverage CBE’s collective knowledge, capabilities and our extensive network of industry and academic partners. We will collaborate the California Institute for Energy and Environment (CIEE) who will manage the work with CBE and numerous contributors listed below. One project will demonstrate a large new-to-market heat recovery chiller that uses a refrigerant with an ultra-low GWP. This will be tested in in collaboration with a California health care partner with an extensive portfolio of hospital facilities, in order to make it easier to scale this demonstration to other hospitals.?It will be led by Paul Raftery and Therese Peffer, and the team also includes Taylor Engineers and Lawrence Berkeley Labs. Read more at: https://lnkd.in/gAckgEGc The other project aims to advance the adoption personal comfort devices by creating and testing new products, including a hub and ecosystem to connect them and also to link with building control systems. The CBE and CIEE team will include charlie huizenga, Hui Zhang, Tobias Kramer and Therese Peffer. Our project team also includes contributors from TRC Companies, Inc., Normal Software, Arup, Lawrence Berkeley Labs and the University of Notre Dame.?More details are listed on this project page: https://lnkd.in/grtA_h7K https://lnkd.in/geCZmaZM #zerocarbon #comfort #HVAC #decarbonization #buildings
New Funding Will Advance Research on Personal Comfort and Advanced HVAC Solutions - Center for the Built Environment
cbe.berkeley.edu
-
This conference looks very promising, with CBE researchers, our consortium partners and other sustainability leaders presenting many critical strategies, topics and technologies.
Nothing could be better to celebrate my birthday month than debating whether or not "Zero Carbon" is possible with some of my favorite people: Jack Rusk, Matt Roberts, and Andres Gutierrez at the 2024 Net Zero Conference and making new friends at the Women in Net Zero mixer. The conference (by Verdical Group) brings together experts in climate, net zero, ESG, equity, carbon, and resilience on 9/17 + 9/18 in Anaheim, CA (right across the street from Disneyland). Join us in experiencing insightful educational sessions, notable keynotes, and exciting tours. Visit https://hubs.li/Q02z_4L50 to register and use code NETZERO10 for 10% off! #NetZeroFuture #zerocarbon #netzerobuildings #sustainabledesign