This invention relates to the field of designing, constructing and operating buildings. More particularly, this invention relates to methods to extract information from digital representations of buildings to enable efficient use of such information for various purposes, including but not limited to conducting performance simulations, and easing compliance with building codes and standards.
The processes of designing, constructing and operating buildings are complex undertakings that increasingly are performed using tools that create digital representations of various aspects of such buildings and their operations. These processes must be performed in compliance with an extensive range of building codes and standards that govern every aspect of the building, from detailed product specifications, to health and safety issues, as well as energy performance and indoor environmental quality. Present methods do not enable efficient integration of the information contained in the digital representations of building with the codes and standards that govern their construction and operation, leading to errors and inefficiencies. Present methods also do not enable the generation of performance simulations to assist with design decision making.
Green buildings aim to reduce the environmental impact by saving land, energy, water, and material, as well as creating a healthy, comfortable, and productive built environment for human beings. As a well-established and widely-adopted voluntary green building evaluation system, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) (USGBC (2011b), LEED 2009 for New Construction and Major Renovation, Washington, D.C., United States Green Building Council) has been recognized as a benchmark for green buildings internationally. In the United States alone, the LEED certification market has grown dramatically. The number of LEED certified projects has achieved a 103% average annual growth rate from 2000 to 2011 (Zhao, J. & Lam, K. P. (2012). “Influential factors analysis on LEED building markets in U.S. East Coast cities by using Support Vector Regression”, Sustainable Cities and Society, 5, 37-43). According to (Yudelson, J. (2008), Green Building Through Integrated Design (GreenSource Books)(e-book), McGraw Hill Professional), “Increased economic benefits are the prime driver of change for green buildings.” One of the major cost savings for green buildings is operation cost reduction by using less energy. Energy and Atmosphere (EA) section in the LEED 2009 New Construction and Major Innovation (LEED 2009 NC) uses energy cost saving, rather than actual energy consumption saving as the prerequisite (10% improvement than baseline) and the point calculation method. The EA section also has the highest possible points (35 out of 110) among all the 7 categories. This study focuses on meeting energy assessment criteria as per LEED as an exemplary rating system.
Life-cycle cost reduction is a driver for green buildings, but the “perceived higher costs” can be a barrier for adopting green buildings (Yudelson, 2008). The LEED submission process often requires significant amount of time and cost for the documentation. Regarding the cost premium incurred for green buildings, Kats (Kats, G., Braman, J. & James, M. J. (2010), Greening our built environment: costs, benefits, and strategies, ISLAND Press) states that “LEED certification does, but green design need not.” (Kats et al., 2010) Currently, Green Building Certification Institute (GBCI) handles LEED project submissions and certifications. An online system—LEED Online has been established for the LEED 2009 NC to receive project registration and submission (GBCI. (2014), “LEED Online”: Green Building Certification Institute. Available at: http://www.gbci.org/main-nav/building-certification/leed-online/about-leed-online.aspx). The LEED Online system is a useful tool, but the amount of effort to fill in the online PDF-format forms is considerable. Research shows the cost of LEED documentation is from $25,000 to $90,000, depending on the complexity of the project, team experience and level of certification (Yudelson, 2008), which can be the second biggest cost for the entire LEED certification process (Environmental-Building-News. (2012), “The Cost of LEED Project Certification”. Available at: http://www.buildinggreen.com/auth/article.cfm/2010/5/1/The-Cost-of-LEED-Certification/). Take the EA Prerequisite 2 for example. In order to fulfill the energy performance requirements, about 1300-1400 variables have to be filled in the PDF-format template for a medium size office building project (the number of variables may vary depending on the characteristics of the building project). Most of this data can be found in the result output file of a whole building energy simulation program.
The lack of team experience can also be an obstacle for LEED certification (Yudelson, 2008). Special training and guidance need to be provided. For example, a common way to demonstrate energy cost reduction is through whole building energy simulation. However, building energy modeling is a relatively new concept and beyond the traditional work scope of architects and engineers. Although research on building energy modeling has been conducted for decades since 1970s', the industry application of building energy modeling started from early 2000s' in accordance with the fast growing of EnergyStar and LEED certifications (Vaughn, K. (2011), “The “Push and Pull” of Energy Modeling Demand”. Available at: http://blog.rmi.org/ThePushPullEnergyModelingDemand, EPA. (2001), “The Power of Partnerships—ENERGY STAR® and Other Voluntary Programs”. Available at: http://www.energystar.gov/ia/partners/annualreports/annual_report—2000.p df?a5f4-f2f9). To meet the need of the building energy modeling market, a new job category—Commercial Building Energy Modeler—was introduced by the US government in 2011 (DOE. (2011), “Job/Task Analysis for a Commercial Building Energy Modeler: Public Comment Draft”. Available at: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/commercial_initiative/pdfs/energy_modeler_jta_comment.pdf). Continuous guidance and training is still essential for the building industry with respect to LEED requirements.
Several software tools have been developed to facilitate the LEED submission process from different perspectives. “TRACE 700 can help document compliance with ASHRAE Standard 90.1 or validate the building's eligibility for LEED certification” by achieving the LEED EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 (TRANE. (2013), “TRACE™ 700 and LEED®”. Available at: http://www.trane.com//COMMERCIAL/DNA/View.aspx?i=2396). Bentley's “AECOsim Compliance Manager” can “streamline the LEED certification process and maximize LEED credits” in the design stage (Bentley. (2013a), “AECOsim Compliance Manager”. Available at: http://www.bentley.com/en-US/Promo/AECOsim/aecosim+compliance+manager.htm). The corresponding energy simulation tool—“AECOsim Energy Simulator” uses EnergyPlus (DOE. (2012), “About EnergyPlus”. Available at: http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/energyplus/energyplus_about.cfm) engine and can generate LEED reports of “peak loads, annual energy calculations, energy consumptions, carbon emissions, and fuel costs” (Bentley. (2013b), “AECOsim Energy Simulator”. Available at: http://www.bentley.com/en-US/Promo/AECOsim/aecosim+energy+simulator.htm). Those tools can facilitate the LEED certification process in one way or another. However, these LEED functions are bundled with certain commercial energy model software program. Users have to create energy models using these commercial programs. Other public domain and widely used energy modeling tools, such as EnergyPlus and eQUEST, cannot be processed directly.
The “COMNET Energy Modeling Portal for LEED Online” was developed for eQUEST program to achieve the LEED EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 (COMNET. (2012), “The COMNET Energy Modeling Portal for LEED Online”. Available at: http://www.comnet.org/mgp/sites/default/files/COMNET%20portal%20fact%20sheet_LEEDonline.pdf). The eQUEST energy model file (SIM-format) can be uploaded onto the web-based tool. Then the COMNET XML standard output file can be generated and uploaded to the LEED Online website fulfilling the submission templates. The COMNET tool is effective for eQUEST users to submit LEED energy performance data. However, this tool cannot provide all the information that the LEED EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 requires. Other outside sources need to be manually included to complete the submission template.
Tools for calculating points in other LEED categories have also been developed. “IES VE-Toolkit for LEED” can calculate LEED points for Indoor Environment Quality (IEQ) Credit 8.1 daylighting performance, IEQ Credit 7.1 comfort criteria, Water Efficiency Prerequisite 1-3, and EA Credit 2 and 6 for renewable energy (IES. (2013), “VE-Toolkit for LEED”. Available at: http://www.iesve.com/software/toolkits/VE-Toolkit-for-LEED—458). Huang et al. (Huang, Y. C., Lam, K. P. & Dobbs, G. (Year), “A Scalable Lighting Simulation Tool for Integrated Building Design”. Third National Conference of IBPSA-USA, 2008 Berkeley, Calif. IBPSA, 206-213) proposed a “Scalable Lighting Simulation Tool for Integrated Building Design”, which is able to calculate the LEED IEQ Credit 8.1 and 8.2 for daylight availability and external view availability, respectively (Huang et al., 2008). DesignBuilder daylighting calculation can also generate reports for LEED Credit 8.1 by using the Radiance calculation engine (DesignBuilder. (2011), “DesignBuilder Daylighting”. Available at: http://designbuilderusa.com/designbuilder-daylighting).
To facilitate the LEED submission in the EA category, improvements can be made in the following aspects. First, an online adaptable data structure should be introduced, to support various energy simulation tools and continuous updates on LEED requirements. Second, outside resources should be integrated in the tool to further reduce the manual input effort.
This present invention describes methods and systems to efficiently map and extract information from digital representations of buildings for use for a variety of purposes, including but not limited to the performance of dynamic simulations of building performance, and for code and standards compliance.
This system will support (1) the creation of a detailed building information model during the design phase that can be subjected to various building performance simulation evaluations to assist design decision making and to be used for code and standard compliances; (2) modification of the design model during the construction and validated during the commissioning phases to become the as-built model; and (3) eventual continuous deployment during the operation phase as an integrated component of the building automation system (BAS) for conducting advanced predictive building control and optimization to reduce energy consumption and improve occupant comfort. The system enables a “living” building information model that will evolve throughout the entire building life-cycle.
The present invention (referred to herein as LEED Energy Performance Online Submission Tool (LEPOST)) is developed focusing on the two aspects above. A “LEEDXML-Reference” data structure is implemented to transform LEED standard into a dynamic data structure for interactively browsing and searching the standard. A “LEEDXML-Template” data structure is created to store and map building energy simulation output data into the actual LEED EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 submission templates and calculate the achievable points. EnergyPlus, a whole building energy simulation tool that is officially supported and constantly updated by DOE, and eQUEST, a commonly used energy simulation tool in industry, are fully implemented in the current version of LEPOST. By using LEPOST, instead of filling in thousands variables manually, only about 20 variables (the number of variables is project-specific) need to be filled to generate the standard submission templates. The amount of time to prepare the EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 documentation can be reduced from hours (if not days) to a matter of minutes.
LEED Energy Performance Online Submission Tool (LEPOST) uses XML-based information technology to transform the static LEED standard into repository dynamic data structure for interactively browsing and searching the standard, and automatically maps building energy simulation results to the LEED submission requirements.
The development of LEPOST directly contributes to the building industry by reducing the time required for the LEED documentation. The concept of LEPOST also contributes to data interoperability knowledge by demonstrating a viable solution to extract and map digital model information for various code and standard compliance purposes. Specifically,
It is an object of the present invention to describe methods and systems to enable efficient and accurate integration between digital representations of buildings and the codes and standards that govern their design, construction and operations.
For the present invention to be easily understood and readily practiced, the invention will now be described, for the purposes of illustration and not limitation, in conjunction with the following figures, wherein:
a)-(d) are the examples of EnergyPlus output file, LEEDXML-Template and EnergyPlus mapping rule of the present invention;
a) is an exemplary screenshot of LEPOST submission page Step 2 for instructions to prepare EnergyPlus model output file;
b) is an exemplary screenshot of LEPOST submission page Step 2 for instructions to prepare eQUEST model output file;
a) is an exemplary screenshot of LEPOST submission page Step 3 for user manual input;
a) is a sample page of LEED EAP-2 submission template;
b) is an example of EnergyStar Target Finder result page; and
The present invention 10 describes methods and systems for efficient extraction of information from digital representations of building and the use of such information for various purposes, including but not limited to the performance of building simulation evaluations, and the compliance with building codes and standards.
LEPOST uses a web-based information infrastructure. Techniques implemented in the backend include Servlet, JSP and XPath (TRANE. (2013), “TRACE™ 700 and LEED®”. Available at: http://www.trane.com//COMMERCIAL/DNA/View.aspx?i=2396; W3C. (1999), “XML Path Language”. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/; Apache. (2012), “Interface Servlet”. Available at: http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/servletapi/javax/servlet/Servlet.html). In the frontend, HTML and jQuery (jQuery. (2013), “jQuery”. Available at: http://jquery.com/) are used for the implementation. LEPOST supports the following web browsers and their newer versions: IE8.0, Chrome 19.0, Firefox 12.0, and Safari 5.1 for PCs; and Safari 5.1 for Macs.
Now turning to
Reference Function 12
The LEED 2009 NC standard 14 is available online for public download (USGBC, 2011b). A semi-automated process is created to transform the static standard into an XML-based data structure, as shown in
Online Submission Function 18
The starting point for online submission function 18 is Manual User Input 32. A user needs to choose whether to use EnergyPlus or eQUEST programs to move forward in function 114 (see
A. EnergyPlus Model Output Preparation
According to the LEED NC 2009 EA Prerequisite 2, all the building energy models should be created by meeting the requirements in the ASHRAE 90.1-2007 Appendix G standard. US Green Building Council (USGBC) published a detailed guideline—“Advanced Energy Modeling for LEED” to assist energy modelers to build and simulate the energy model to achieve the EA requirements (USGBC (2011a), Advanced Energy Modeling for LEED. Washington D.C.: U.S. Green Building Council). Four baseline models with rotations at 0°, 90°, 180° and 270° orientations to the north axis, as well as the design case orientation models should be built using commercially available software tools that are outside the scope of this invention.
Three additional steps need to be accomplished to generate a standard EnergyPlus output file for LEPOST.
Step 1 (Block 115 of
Step 2 (Block 106 of
Step 3 (Block 110 of
B. eQUEST Model Output Preparation
The baseline modeling in eQUEST is similar as the process for EnergyPlus. Four baseline models with 0°, 90°, 180° and 270° to the north axis and design model could be either built by using the embedded “Parametric Run” module in eQUEST or built separately. All the models should be compliant with ASHRAE 90.1-2007 Appendix G and LEED NC 2009 EA Prerequisite 2: Minimum Energy Performance. After the five eQUEST whole building models are created, two more steps should be achieved to generate the standard file for LEPOST:
Step 1 (Block 115 of
Step 2 (Block 107 of
Step 3 (Block 110 of
Model File Zip, Upload, and Unzip
The user performs file Zip and uploads the zipped files manually. In Block 110, the zipped files are unzipped using standard Java library function to retrieve eQUEST Model Output 108 (the same as 107) and EnergyPlus Model Output 109 (the same as 106).
File Validator 30
The “File Validator” 30 is implemented to perform integrity check for the EnergyPlus model simulation result files (Model Output 109).
Text File Transformer 28
A unique ID is allocated by “Text File Transformer” 28 for each data field to be filled in the LEEDXML-template 38. The techniques for aggregating and representing data are well known in the art. Any errors that occur during “Text File Transformer” 28 process will be sent to Process Status Indicator 83.
Support Data Processor 24
More than 70% of the information for the LEED EA Prerequisite 2 and Credit 1 can be automatically filled with energy simulation results from the output files directly. Besides Manual User Input 32 discussed above, two other manual inputs go to the “Result Calculator” 101 and “EnergyStar Request Processor” 102. Table 2 shows the detailed information of the manual input for Result Calculator 101 and EnergyStar Request Processor 102. Input fields 109 in
Web Extracting Function 50
Utility rates need to be filled in to calculate energy cost information by both “Result Calculator” 101 and “EnergyStar Request Processor” 102. Web extracting function 50 creates a link to the Energy Information Agency (EIA) database (EIA. (2012), “Eletricity Data”: Energy Information Administration. Available at: http://www.eia.gov/electricity/data.cfm#sales) and returns current (updated periodically by the EIA) electricity and natural gas prices for energy cost calculation in Result Calculator 101 based on zip codes and utility company names from manual user input 32
LEEDXML-Template 38
The original fillable PDF-format LEED EAP-2 and EAC-1 submission forms provided by USGBC are transformed to be LEEDXML-Templates. The XML data structure is adopted due to its extensibility and the ability to exchange and aggregate a wide variety of data on the web. To view the template online, HTML-format files are created via XSLT transformations of the LEEDXML-Templates 38 (W3C. (2012), “Extensible Markup Language (XML)”. Available at: http://www.w3.org/XML/). See
The Mapping Rule 36 defines four categories for the fillable fields in the LEEDXML-Template 38—“Direct,” “Document,” “Other,” and “Calculated.” (1) “Direct” refers to the data that is readily available in the EnergyPlus or eQUEST output files 108 or 109; (2) “Document” refers to the fields where user needs to upload certain documents separately, such as design drawings and architect's signature, which is not included in this invention; (3) “Other” indicates special circumstances where data has to be retrieved from other web sources (Web Extracting routine 50,
Mapping Processor 22
Result Calculator 101
Result Calculator 101 processes the model data transformed by Text File Transformer 28 and Manual User Input 32 (the second column in Table 1) with the required calculations by LEED EAP-2.
Example [1] is to calculate the heating energy cost by multiple heating energy consumption data from Text File Transformer 28 and electricity price data from Utility Data 34.
Example [2] is to calculate final LEED points by compare the total annual energy cost savings with the lookup table (Table 3) defined by the USGBC based on whether the project is a new building (>=60% of the building is new construction) or existing building renovation project (<60% of the building is new construction).
Any errors that occur during “Result Calculator” 101 process will be sent to Process Status Indicator 83.
EnergyStar Request Processor 102
Data entry of the EnergyStar Target Finder (EnergyStar. (2013), “Target Finder Services”. Available at: http://portfoliomanager.energystar.gov/webservices/home/api/targetFinder), as part of the LEED EA requirements, is required for an externally invoked calculation tool. The current practice for LEED submission requires users to go to the EnergyStar website to invoke the calculation and manually enter the result data into the LEED submission template, whereas LEPOST is able to automatically transfer the data entered in the tool to the EnergyStar website and return the result back to LEPOST (Process 102 in
A possible error could occur when the Energy Star Target Finder server or the connection between LEPOST and the server is dysfunctional. If this problem occurs, users can still get a partially filled LEED submission files 111 and 112 without the Energy Star Target Finder Result Page 113.
Mapping Engine 82
Based on the predefined Mapping Rule 36, the Mapping Engine 82 inserts the data with unique IDs (variable names) from Result Calculator 101 and the Utility Data 34 into the 2 LEEDXML-Templates 38 (LEEDXML Template EAP-2 and LEEDXML Template EAC-1). These filled LEEDXML-Templates will then be used by Report Generator 42.
b), Block 507 shows an example of the “Calculated” mapping process. It defines that the values in “EAp2-0069-1”, “EAp2-0069-g”, “EAp2-0069-h”, “EAp2-0069-i” need to be summed up and divided by 4 to get the average value of all the baseline cases, for example, Space Heating Energy Use.
Process Status Indicator 83
Process Status Indicator gives users the real-time feedback of the entire mapping processes in File Validator, Text File Transformer, Result Calculator, EnergyStar Request Processor, and Mapping Engine (30, 28, 101, 82, and 102).
Report Generator 42 and PDF Generator 44
Report Generator 42 will transform the two filled LEEDXML Templates (EAP-2 and EAC-1) 38 from Mapping Engine 82 and generate two HTML files. Report Generator 42 also takes in the EnergyStar web service results and generate an HTML file. A generic PDF Report Generator 44 converts the three HTML files to PDF-format LEED EAP-2 Submission Document 111 (see
Results
User Interface
User interface 81 navigation structure is shown in
Pushing “Reference” 11 button (see
Pushing “Rating” button (see
Result Generation
The final outputs of the tool are three sets of PDF format documents: the LEED EA Prerequisite 2 submission document 111, the LEED EA Credit 1 submission document 112, and the Energy Star Target Finder Result Page 113 (discussed in detail above). The sample report pages are illustrated in
There are two main challenges of developing this tool. First, different energy simulation tools have different result output file formats. Those files contain different information that may or may not be useful for the LEED submission. Therefore, for each energy simulation tool, manual work is needed to identify and structure the data from the simulation result output files. If the result output file already uses a structured format, such as HTML-format or CSV-format, the data extraction can be achieved within a short time period. But if the result output file is in a text-based format, such as SIM-format used in eQUEST, identifying useful information from the text file can be time consuming for the first time development task. Once the useful data are identified, extracting and mapping to the LEEDXML-Template is relatively straightforward.
Second, some part of the calculation relies on other web-based engines and databases. For example, Energy Star rating result page is calculated in Energy Star Target Finder engine. The web API technology is used to enter and retrieve data from the web service. The completeness and robustness of the tool is affected by the stability of those web services. To solve this problem, LEPOST is designed to bypass such related function if the web service does not response to the call within 10 seconds.
While the disclosure has been described in detail and with reference to specific embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiments. Thus, it is intended that the present disclosure cover the modifications and variations of this disclosure provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/956,638, titled METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR DIGITAL INFORMATION MODELING FOR CODES AND STANDARDS COMPLIANCE, filed Jun. 13, 2013, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This invention was made with partial government support under NSF EFRI grant Prime Award No. EFRI-1038139, Sub-Award No. 181590112001. The government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61956638 | Jun 2013 | US |