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Towards a Generic Residential Building Model for Heat-Health Warning Systems

  • A strong heat load in buildings and cities during the summer is not a new phenomenon. However, prolonged heat waves and increasing urbanization are intensifying the heat island effect in our cities; hence, the heat exposure in residential buildings. The thermophysiological load in the interior and exterior environments can be reduced in the medium and long term, through urban planning and buildingA strong heat load in buildings and cities during the summer is not a new phenomenon. However, prolonged heat waves and increasing urbanization are intensifying the heat island effect in our cities; hence, the heat exposure in residential buildings. The thermophysiological load in the interior and exterior environments can be reduced in the medium and long term, through urban planning and building physics measures. In the short term, an increasingly vulnerable population must be effectively informed of an impending heat wave. Building simulation models can be favorably used to evaluate indoor heat stress. This study presents a generic simulation model, developed from monitoring data in urban multi-unit residential buildings during a summer period and using statistical methods. The model determines both the average room temperature and its deviations and, thus, consists of three sub-models: cool, average, and warm building types. The simulation model is based on the same mathematical algorithm, whereas each building type is described by a specific data set, concerning its building physical parameters and user behavior, respectively. The generic building model may be used in urban climate analyses with many individual buildings distributed across the city or in heat–health warning systems, with different building and user types distributed across a region. An urban climate analysis (with weather data from a database) may evaluate local differences in urban and indoor climate, whereas heat–health warning systems (driven by a weather forecast) obtain additional information on indoor heat stress and its expected deviations.show moreshow less

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Metadaten
Document Type:Article (reviewed)
Zitierlink: https://opus.hs-offenburg.de/5266
Bibliografische Angaben
Title (English):Towards a Generic Residential Building Model for Heat-Health Warning Systems
Author:Jens PfafferottStaff MemberORCiDGND, Sascha RißmannStaff MemberGND, Guido Halbig, Franz Schröder, Sascha Saad
Year of Publication:2021
Place of publication:Basel
Publisher:MDPI
Page Number:26
First Page:1
Last Page:26
Article Number:13050
Parent Title (English):International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Editor:Ana Casanueva, Marco Morabito, Annkatrin Burgstall
Volume:18
Issue:24
ISSN:1661-7827 (Print)
ISSN:1660-4601 (Online)
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182413050
URN:https://urn:nbn:de:bsz:ofb1-opus4-52663
Language:English
Inhaltliche Informationen
Institutes:Forschung / INES - Institut für nachhaltige Energiesysteme
Fakultät Maschinenbau und Verfahrenstechnik (M+V)
Institutes:Bibliografie
Tag:building simulation; generic models; heat–health warning system; indoor heat stress; monitoring campaigns; residential buildings; statistical methods; thermal comfort
Formale Angaben
Open Access: Open Access 
Licence (German):License LogoUrheberrechtlich geschützt