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EA p2: Minimum energy performance

Intent


To establish the minimum level of energy efficiency for the proposed building and systems to reduce environmental and economic impacts associated with excessive energy use.

Requirements

Option 1. Whole Building Energy simulation

Demonstrate a 10% improvement in the proposed building performance rating for new buildings, or a 5% improvement in the proposed building performance rating for major renovations to existing buildings, compared with the baseline building performance rating.

Calculate the baseline building performance rating according to the building performance rating method in Appendix G of ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-2007 (with errata but without addenda) using a computer simulation model for the whole building project.

Appendix G of Standard 90.1-2007 requires that the energy analysis done for the building performance rating method include all energy costs associated with the building project. To achieve points using this credit, the proposed design must meet the following criteria:

•    Comply with the mandatory provisions (Sections 5.4, 6.4, 7.4, 8.4, 9.4 and 10.4) in Standard 90.1-2007 (with errata but without addenda).

•    Include all energy costs associated with the building project.

•    Compare against a baseline building that complies with Appendix G of Standard 90.1-2007 (with errata but without addenda). The default process energy cost is 25% of the total energy cost for the baseline building. If the building’s process energy cost is less than 25% of the baseline building energy cost, the LEED submittal must include documentation substantiating that process energy inputs are appropriate.

For the purpose of this analysis, process energy is considered to include, but is not limited to, office and general miscellaneous equipment, computers, elevators and escalators, kitchen cooking and refrigeration, laundry washing and drying, lighting exempt from the lighting power allowance (e.g., lighting integral to medical equipment) and other (e.g., waterfall pumps).

 

Regulated (non-process) energy includes lighting (for the interior, parking garage, surface parking, façade, or building grounds, etc. except as noted above), heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) (for space heating, space cooling, fans, pumps, toilet exhaust, parking garage ventilation, kitchen hood exhaust, etc.), and service water heating for domestic or space heating purposes.

 

Process loads must be identical for both the baseline building performance rating and the proposed building performance rating. However, project teams may follow the exceptional calculation method (ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-2007 G2.5) to document measures that reduce process loads. Documentation of process load energy savings must include a list of the assumptions made for both the base and the proposed design, and theoretical or empirical information supporting these assumptions.

 

Projects in California may use Title 24-2005, Part 6 in place of ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-2007 for Option 1.

 

OR

 

Option 2. Prescriptive Compliance Path: ASHRAE advanced Energy Design Guide

Comply with the prescriptive measures of the ASHRAE Advanced Energy Design Guide appropriate to the project scope, outlined below. Project teams must comply with all applicable criteria as established in the Advanced Energy Design Guide for the climate zone in which the building is located.

 

Path1. ASHRAE advanced Energy Design Guide for small office Buildings 2004

 

The building must meet the following requirements:

•    Less than 20,000 square feet.

•    Office occupancy. Path1. ASHRAE advanced Energy Design Guide for small retail Buildings 2006

The building must meet the following requirements:

•    Less than 20,000 square feet.

•    Retail occupancy.

 

Path 3. ASHRAE advanced Energy Design Guide for small warehouses and self-storage Buildings 2008

 

The building must meet the following requirements:

•    Less than 50,000 square feet.

•    Warehouse or self-storage occupancy.

 

OR

 

Option 3. Prescriptive Compliance Path: advanced Buildings Core Performance Guide

Comply with the prescriptive measures identified in the Advanced Buildings Core Performance Guide developed by the New Buildings Institute. The building must meet the following requirements:

•    Less than 100,000 square feet.

•    Comply with Section 1: Design Process Strategies, and Section 2: Core Performance Requirements.

•    Office, school, public assembly, and retail projects less than 100,000 square feet must comply with Section and Section 2 of the Core Performance Guide.

•    Other project types less than 100,000 square feet implement the basic requirements of the Core Performance Guide.

•    Health care, warehouse and laboratory projects are ineligible for this path.

Potential technologies & Strategies

 

Design the building envelope and systems to meet baseline requirements. Use a computer simulation model to assess the energy performance and identify the most cost-effective energy efficiency measures. Quantify energy performance compared with a baseline building.

 

If local code has demonstrated quantitative and textual equivalence following, at a minimum, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) standard process for commercial energy code determination, then the results of that analysis may be used to correlate local code performance with ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard 90.1-2007. Details on the DOE process for commercial energy code determination can be found at http://www.energycodes.gov/implement/determinations_com.stm.

 

FBK Solutions

 

The project complies with Option 1: Whole building energy simulation and achieved an energy cost saving of 25.78%.

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