Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses

Building energy efficiency, construction cost, life cycle cost, and carbon emission are the best interests of users, owners and different vendors. This study assessed the energy performance (EP) related investment and operational energy cost of Kouvola housing fair NZEB. Data from 12 new detached ho...

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Main Authors: Ahmed Kaiser, Hajian Hatef, Hasu Tero, Kurnitski Jarek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2020-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_13001.pdf
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spelling doaj-6554415098244fa3b1f0a69ea43da2a92021-04-02T14:10:00ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422020-01-011721300110.1051/e3sconf/202017213001e3sconf_nsb2020_13001Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analysesAhmed KaiserHajian Hatef0Hasu Tero1Kurnitski JarekAalto University, Department of Civil EngineeringKouvola Innovation OyBuilding energy efficiency, construction cost, life cycle cost, and carbon emission are the best interests of users, owners and different vendors. This study assessed the energy performance (EP) related investment and operational energy cost of Kouvola housing fair NZEB. Data from 12 new detached houses were collected, which fulfilled the energy certificate class of B according to the Finnish nearly zero energy building (NZEB) regulation. Besides, emission from building materials, construction and energy use during 50 years of one model building were estimated, aiming to compare the life cycle emission from wooden building, insulated concrete building, blockhouse and log house. The results showed that the total construction cost was independent to EP-value and even had a slightly negative correlation to the EP-value. The average EP-value of 12 buildings was slightly higher than that of buildings in Tampere housing fair 2012, which showed no improvement of nearly zero energy building (NZEB) guidelines since 2012. Energy performance related cost dependency in specific cost categories was shown so that EP-value improvement by 40 units increased less than 2% of construction cost. Electricity had a significant contribution to CO2 emission while local district heating was based on renewables. Material emissions contribution was 32-48% of total emissions, and wooden buildings showed lower carbon footprint compared to other building structures.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_13001.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmed Kaiser
Hajian Hatef
Hasu Tero
Kurnitski Jarek
spellingShingle Ahmed Kaiser
Hajian Hatef
Hasu Tero
Kurnitski Jarek
Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Ahmed Kaiser
Hajian Hatef
Hasu Tero
Kurnitski Jarek
author_sort Ahmed Kaiser
title Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
title_short Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
title_full Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
title_fullStr Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
title_full_unstemmed Kouvola Housing fair NZEB houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
title_sort kouvola housing fair nzeb houses energy, cost and carbon analyses
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Building energy efficiency, construction cost, life cycle cost, and carbon emission are the best interests of users, owners and different vendors. This study assessed the energy performance (EP) related investment and operational energy cost of Kouvola housing fair NZEB. Data from 12 new detached houses were collected, which fulfilled the energy certificate class of B according to the Finnish nearly zero energy building (NZEB) regulation. Besides, emission from building materials, construction and energy use during 50 years of one model building were estimated, aiming to compare the life cycle emission from wooden building, insulated concrete building, blockhouse and log house. The results showed that the total construction cost was independent to EP-value and even had a slightly negative correlation to the EP-value. The average EP-value of 12 buildings was slightly higher than that of buildings in Tampere housing fair 2012, which showed no improvement of nearly zero energy building (NZEB) guidelines since 2012. Energy performance related cost dependency in specific cost categories was shown so that EP-value improvement by 40 units increased less than 2% of construction cost. Electricity had a significant contribution to CO2 emission while local district heating was based on renewables. Material emissions contribution was 32-48% of total emissions, and wooden buildings showed lower carbon footprint compared to other building structures.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_13001.pdf
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