Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies

This study investigates the energy and cost performance of thirty recent buildings in Melbourne, Australia. Commonly, building design decisions are based on issues pertaining to construction cost, and consideration of energy performance is made only within the context of the initial project budget....

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Main Authors: Yu Lay Langston, Craig Langston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2012-11-01
Series:Construction Economics and Building
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2973
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spelling doaj-e26c490a5fda4da7a0540d6f9b7720852020-11-24T23:44:01ZengUTS ePRESSConstruction Economics and Building2204-90292012-11-017110.5130/AJCEB.v7i1.29731932Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case StudiesYu Lay Langston0Craig Langston1Deakin UniversityDeakin University This study investigates the energy and cost performance of thirty recent buildings in Melbourne, Australia. Commonly, building design decisions are based on issues pertaining to construction cost, and consideration of energy performance is made only within the context of the initial project budget. Even where energy is elevated to more importance, operating energy is seen as the focus and embodied energy is nearly always ignored. For the first time, a large sample of buildings has been assembled and analyzed to improve the understanding of both energy and cost performance over their full life cycle, which formed the basis of a wider doctoral study into the inherent relationship between energy and cost. The aim of this paper is to report on typical values for embodied energy, operating energy, capital cost and operating cost per square metre for a range of building functional types investigated in this research. The conclusion is that energy and cost have quite different profiles across projects, and yet the mean GJ/m 2 or cost/m2 have relatively low coefficients of variation and therefore may be useful as benchmarks of typical building performance.     https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2973
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yu Lay Langston
Craig Langston
spellingShingle Yu Lay Langston
Craig Langston
Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
Construction Economics and Building
author_facet Yu Lay Langston
Craig Langston
author_sort Yu Lay Langston
title Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
title_short Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
title_full Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
title_fullStr Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
title_full_unstemmed Building Energy and Cost Performance: An Analysis of Thirty Melbourne Case Studies
title_sort building energy and cost performance: an analysis of thirty melbourne case studies
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Construction Economics and Building
issn 2204-9029
publishDate 2012-11-01
description This study investigates the energy and cost performance of thirty recent buildings in Melbourne, Australia. Commonly, building design decisions are based on issues pertaining to construction cost, and consideration of energy performance is made only within the context of the initial project budget. Even where energy is elevated to more importance, operating energy is seen as the focus and embodied energy is nearly always ignored. For the first time, a large sample of buildings has been assembled and analyzed to improve the understanding of both energy and cost performance over their full life cycle, which formed the basis of a wider doctoral study into the inherent relationship between energy and cost. The aim of this paper is to report on typical values for embodied energy, operating energy, capital cost and operating cost per square metre for a range of building functional types investigated in this research. The conclusion is that energy and cost have quite different profiles across projects, and yet the mean GJ/m 2 or cost/m2 have relatively low coefficients of variation and therefore may be useful as benchmarks of typical building performance.    
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2973
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