Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study

Used properly, daylight can provide visual comfort, reduce energy consumption and improve health and safety at work. This paper investigates the influence that different roof types, (i.e., sawtooth roof, skylight and monitor), have on daylight levels, along with the construction cost in an industria...

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Main Authors: Theodora Mavridou, Lambros T. Doulos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Buildings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/170
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spelling doaj-7248f2b5934f433cbf13250494a8ee682020-11-24T21:30:45ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092019-07-019717010.3390/buildings9070170buildings9070170Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case StudyTheodora Mavridou0Lambros T. Doulos1School of Civil Engineering and Surveying, Faculty of Technology, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO1 3AH, UKLighting Laboratory, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Zografou, 157 80 Athens, GreeceUsed properly, daylight can provide visual comfort, reduce energy consumption and improve health and safety at work. This paper investigates the influence that different roof types, (i.e., sawtooth roof, skylight and monitor), have on daylight levels, along with the construction cost in an industrial environment in Athens, Greece. Construction costs and daylight adequacy/uniformity are antagonistic phenomena, since as the distance between the roof openings increases, the construction cost is minimised, while the daylight levels and the uniformity are reduced. Therefore, an optimisation method is proposed in order to find the optimum distance between the roof openings. The selected building is a representative unit of Greek industrial facilities, while the optimisation method is based upon a multiparametric approach. This consists of three (3) different roof opening arrangement types with different geometric characteristics. The daylight metrics used are the Daylight Area, the Daylight Factor, the Mean Daylight Autonomy, the Uniform Daylight Index and the Annual Sunlight Exposure. Overall, sawtooth roofs represent the best choice for daylight provision in industrial buildings at the examined geographic location. Using the aforementioned optimisation method, the optimum solution of distances between the roof openings ranges from 10 m to 13 m.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/170daylightenergy conservationindustrial buildingsoptical comfort
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Theodora Mavridou
Lambros T. Doulos
spellingShingle Theodora Mavridou
Lambros T. Doulos
Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
Buildings
daylight
energy conservation
industrial buildings
optical comfort
author_facet Theodora Mavridou
Lambros T. Doulos
author_sort Theodora Mavridou
title Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
title_short Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
title_full Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
title_fullStr Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Different Roof Types Concerning Daylight in Industrial Buildings during the Initial Design Phase: Methodology and Case Study
title_sort evaluation of different roof types concerning daylight in industrial buildings during the initial design phase: methodology and case study
publisher MDPI AG
series Buildings
issn 2075-5309
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Used properly, daylight can provide visual comfort, reduce energy consumption and improve health and safety at work. This paper investigates the influence that different roof types, (i.e., sawtooth roof, skylight and monitor), have on daylight levels, along with the construction cost in an industrial environment in Athens, Greece. Construction costs and daylight adequacy/uniformity are antagonistic phenomena, since as the distance between the roof openings increases, the construction cost is minimised, while the daylight levels and the uniformity are reduced. Therefore, an optimisation method is proposed in order to find the optimum distance between the roof openings. The selected building is a representative unit of Greek industrial facilities, while the optimisation method is based upon a multiparametric approach. This consists of three (3) different roof opening arrangement types with different geometric characteristics. The daylight metrics used are the Daylight Area, the Daylight Factor, the Mean Daylight Autonomy, the Uniform Daylight Index and the Annual Sunlight Exposure. Overall, sawtooth roofs represent the best choice for daylight provision in industrial buildings at the examined geographic location. Using the aforementioned optimisation method, the optimum solution of distances between the roof openings ranges from 10 m to 13 m.
topic daylight
energy conservation
industrial buildings
optical comfort
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/7/170
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