
Paving the Way to NZEB on two Historical Blocks in Lisbon Pombaline Quarter
Author(s) -
Carlos Duarte,
António Morais
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/603/2/022032
Subject(s) - photovoltaic system , block (permutation group theory) , architectural engineering , building envelope , energy consumption , zero energy building , efficient energy use , facade , energy (signal processing) , primary energy , residual , computer science , engineering , reliability engineering , thermal , civil engineering , renewable energy , electrical engineering , algorithm , statistics , physics , geometry , mathematics , meteorology
The 1758 Lisbon Pombaline Quarter reconstruction plan is made of compact rectangular shaped residential blocks, built with a system that complies solid mass construction elements with a light wooden structure. If we take into consideration both constructive and architectural inherent features of the original Pombaline block, it shows the potential to achieve NZEB level if an energy retrofit strategy at a block scale is implemented, instead of the usual single building or fraction approach. The retrofit of historic buildings has raised questions regarding interventions depth and efficiency, as the impact on the built heritage value has to be residual or null while energy-related improvements must be noticeable. With this in mind, this paper intends to analyse and compare the result on energy demand and primary energy consumption of passive, active and BIST/PV systems packages implementation on two original blocks, with the challenge of minimizing the impact on case studies appearance. A Building Energy Simulation methodology is applied using the whole-of-building dynamic simulation software EnergyPlus. The results show that exterior envelope improvements can reduce up to 50% heating and cooling energy demands increasing thermal comfort at the same time. Finally, a combined VRF/Biomass heating solution display the best results on primary energy consumption while photovoltaic and solar thermal systems proved to have an essential role to achieve NZEB performance.