Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings

The purpose of this study is to analyze current building materials used in current commercial buildings in Singapore and its energy consumption, as well as explore alternative green building materials in green buildings and their potential energy consumption savings. Using these findings, this repor...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ong, Zi Yang
Other Authors: Chuang Poon Hwei
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78321
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-78321
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-783212023-03-03T16:52:48Z Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings Ong, Zi Yang Chuang Poon Hwei School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Construction technology The purpose of this study is to analyze current building materials used in current commercial buildings in Singapore and its energy consumption, as well as explore alternative green building materials in green buildings and their potential energy consumption savings. Using these findings, this report also aims to propose initiatives that can be implemented to increase awareness on green building materials amongst builders, developers and owners, as well as to incentivize usage of green building materials to reduce overall energy consumptions of future commercial buildings. For the design of this project, we first identified current existing materials used for Singapore’s commercial buildings and their energy consumption level. The methodology used to compute energy consumption was via the Energy Use Intensity (EUI) index. The EUI index is a measurement of total amount of energy consumed by a particular building in a span of one year, measured in terms of kilo watt hour per gross floor area (kWh/m²). After which, we explored current green buildings materials used in Singapore and their EUI. Comparing the EUI for current building materials and green materials, we then verified the potential energy consumption savings, and proposed material selection for future construction work for commercial buildings, as well as initiatives to incentivize usage of green buildings and improve current Building Construction Authority (BCA) schemes. Analysis of our results suggest that commercial buildings with green materials, paired with latest technology systems are able to achieve higher potential energy savings. Proposed green materials for future construction work includes Superior Innovative Coating Concepts (SICC) coatings, Cool Roof and Biowall. The research analysis on the Singapore construction landscape and current BCA schemes such as the BCA Green Mark, suggest a need to improve awareness of benefits of green materials amongst developers, and improvements in BCA scorecards to incentivize adoption of these materials. In conclusion, there is strong evidence that selecting green materials can significantly reduce energy consumption levels in commercial buildings in Singapore compared to current materials. Thus, we recommend a two-prong approach to encourage the adoption of these materials, through educating builders on the existence and benefits of our identified green materials, as well as incentivizing them through structural changes in current BCA accreditation schemes. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2019-06-18T02:29:01Z 2019-06-18T02:29:01Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78321 en Nanyang Technological University 35 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Construction technology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Construction technology
Ong, Zi Yang
Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
description The purpose of this study is to analyze current building materials used in current commercial buildings in Singapore and its energy consumption, as well as explore alternative green building materials in green buildings and their potential energy consumption savings. Using these findings, this report also aims to propose initiatives that can be implemented to increase awareness on green building materials amongst builders, developers and owners, as well as to incentivize usage of green building materials to reduce overall energy consumptions of future commercial buildings. For the design of this project, we first identified current existing materials used for Singapore’s commercial buildings and their energy consumption level. The methodology used to compute energy consumption was via the Energy Use Intensity (EUI) index. The EUI index is a measurement of total amount of energy consumed by a particular building in a span of one year, measured in terms of kilo watt hour per gross floor area (kWh/m²). After which, we explored current green buildings materials used in Singapore and their EUI. Comparing the EUI for current building materials and green materials, we then verified the potential energy consumption savings, and proposed material selection for future construction work for commercial buildings, as well as initiatives to incentivize usage of green buildings and improve current Building Construction Authority (BCA) schemes. Analysis of our results suggest that commercial buildings with green materials, paired with latest technology systems are able to achieve higher potential energy savings. Proposed green materials for future construction work includes Superior Innovative Coating Concepts (SICC) coatings, Cool Roof and Biowall. The research analysis on the Singapore construction landscape and current BCA schemes such as the BCA Green Mark, suggest a need to improve awareness of benefits of green materials amongst developers, and improvements in BCA scorecards to incentivize adoption of these materials. In conclusion, there is strong evidence that selecting green materials can significantly reduce energy consumption levels in commercial buildings in Singapore compared to current materials. Thus, we recommend a two-prong approach to encourage the adoption of these materials, through educating builders on the existence and benefits of our identified green materials, as well as incentivizing them through structural changes in current BCA accreditation schemes.
author2 Chuang Poon Hwei
author_facet Chuang Poon Hwei
Ong, Zi Yang
format Final Year Project
author Ong, Zi Yang
author_sort Ong, Zi Yang
title Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
title_short Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
title_full Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
title_fullStr Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
title_full_unstemmed Analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
title_sort analysis on selection of building materials to reduce energy consumption in commercial buildings
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78321
_version_ 1759853461492465664