Atkins, R and Emmanuel, R (2014) Could refurbishment of "traditional" buildings reducecarbon emissions? Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 4(3), pp. 221-237. ISSN 2044-124X
Abstract
Purpose – Evaluate the post occupancy performance of a typical “traditional” building using multiple post occupancy evaluation (PoE) protocols against design intents to learn lessons about theirsuitability in meeting UK’s climate change reduction targets. The paper aims to discuss these issues.Design/methodology/approach – PoE studies of a single case study, Norton Park, using three PoEmethodologies. Gaps and overlaps between the PoE protocols are assessed and their role in improving energy and carbon emission performance of traditional buildings is explored.Findings – Refurbishment of the type undertaken in this case study could halve the energy use in traditional buildings with comparable savings in CO2 emission.Research limitations/implications – Traditional buildings could positively contribute toachieving climate change reduction targets; regular feedback loops improve performance over time.Practical implications – Quantification of the likely national benefit of focusing retrofit actions on traditional buildings is explored.Originality/value – The research study demonstrates that very high levels of energy saving can be achieved when traditional buildings are refurbished. In addition on-going monitoring and PoE studieshighlight opportunities to optimise the performance of traditional buildings.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | comfort; energy efficiency; poe; post occupancy evaluation; refurbishment; traditional buildings |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 13:54 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 13:54 |