Estimation of Energy Efficiency Class Limits for Multi-Family Residential Buildings in Poland
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Energy Policy
- establish minimum energy performance standards for new and existing buildings under major renovation in their national building regulations,
- introduce a system of energy performance certificates (EPCs) for their buildings,
- ensure that all new buildings built from 31 December 2020 onwards will be nearly zero energy buildings (n-ZEB).
1.2. Energy Labeling
1.3. Research Goal and Scope
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Reference Energy Standard for Energy Classes
- Rr—representing the requirements for new or modernized buildings. It is the main benchmark used to evaluate the energy performance of a building;
- Rs—representing the average state of the building stock as a benchmark. It corresponds to an average energy efficiency of around 50% of the national or regional building stock (the median value). This value can, for example, refer to the energy demand, the thermal transmittance of partitions, or the total efficiency of technical systems and be determined for different types of buildings.
2.2. Assumptions and Simplifications
3. Description of the Building Database
4. Results and Analysis
4.1. Estimation of the Energy Needed for Heating Indicator
4.2. Influence of Variables on the Energy Needs Indicator
4.3. Defining Energy Efficiency Class Limits
5. Discussion and Future Work
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Country | Energy Performance Presentation Methods |
---|---|
Austria | Classes from A++ to G (energy needs for heating, primary energy, CO2 emissions, an energy efficiency ratio) |
Belgium (Flanders) | Continuous scale (primary energy) |
Belgium (Wallonia, Brussels-Capital Region) | Classes from A++ to G (primary energy) |
Croatia | Classes from A+ to G (residential buildings - energy needs for heating; non-residential buildings - the ratio of energy needs for heating an assessed building to the reference value) |
Czech Republic | Classes from A+ to G (delivered energy, non-renewable primary energy) |
Denmark | Classes from A to G (primary energy) |
France | Classes from A to G (primary energy, greenhouse gas emissions) |
Germany | Continuous scale (primary energy) |
Ireland | Classes from A+ to G (primary energy) Continuous scale (CO2 emissions) |
Italy | Classes from A+ to G (primary energy) Continuous scale (primary energy for heating, cooling, and domestic hot water preparation) |
Malta | Continuous scale (delivered energy, CO2 emissions) |
Norway | Classes from A to G (delivered energy) |
Poland | Continuous scale (primary energy) |
Romania | Classes from A to G (delivered energy) |
Slovakia | Classes from A0 to G (primary energy, delivered energy) Continuous scale (CO2 emissions) |
Slovenia | Classes from A1 to G (energy needs for heating) Continuous scale (primary energy, delivered energy, CO2 emissions) |
Energy Efficiency Class | Limit Based on the Rr | Limit Based on the Rs |
---|---|---|
A | <0.71 ∙ Rr | <0.35 ∙ Rs |
B | <1.00 ∙ Rr | <0.50 ∙ Rs |
C | <1.41 ∙ Rr | <0.71 ∙ Rs |
D | <2.00 ∙ Rr | <1.00 ∙ Rs |
E | <2.83 ∙ Rr | <1.41 ∙ Rs |
F | <4.00 ∙ Rr | <2.00 ∙ Rs |
G | ≥4.00 ∙ Rr | ≥2.00 ∙ Rs |
Building Partition | Thermal Transmittance [W/(m2K)] |
---|---|
external walls | 0.20 |
roof | 0.15 |
ceiling above an unheated basement | 0.25 |
windows | 0.90 |
Building | B1 | B2 | B3 | B4 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Usable area | m2 | 5286.7 | 2627.3 | 1956.1 | 966.5 | |
Volume with controlledtemperature | m3 | 13,713.7 | 6581.7 | 4996.9 | 2404.8 | |
Building shape ratio A/V | - | 0.32 | 0.35 | 0.44 | 0.47 | |
Ratio of windows area | - | 0.23 | 0.20 | 0.18 | 0.16 | |
Area of external partitions | External walls | m2 | 3355.0 | 2005.8 | 1590.2 | 942.9 |
Windows | m2 | 990.0 | 490.0 | 360.0 | 178.2 | |
External doors | m2 | 7.6 | 2.0 | 7.6 | 2.0 | |
Roof | m2 | 607.3 | 304.0 | 607.3 | 304.0 | |
Floor | m2 | 503.0 | 267.0 | 503.0 | 267.0 | |
Quantity of stories | above-ground | - | 11 | 11 | 4 | 4 |
unheated basement | - | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
Quantity of apartments | usable area less than 50 m2 | - | 33 | 22 | 12 | 8 |
usable area from 50 m2 to 100 m2 | - | 66 | 33 | 24 | 12 | |
Quantity of residents | - | 330 | 176 | 120 | 64 | |
Air flow | m3/h | 13,860 | 7590 | 5040 | 2760 |
Variant | Exhaust Ventilation | Exhaust Ventilation with Night Reduction | Ventilation with Heat Recovery | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Warm Climate | Mild Climate | Cold Climate | Warm Climate | Mild Climate | Cold Climate | Warm Climate | Mild Climate | Cold Climate | |
B1 −25%U | 56.25 | 63.78 | 79.95 | 52.70 | 59.82 | 75.36 | 21.23 | 23.82 | 35.69 |
B2 −25%U | 68.90 | 75.40 | 93.82 | 64.95 | 70.91 | 88.70 | 28.67 | 32.51 | 41.14 |
B3 −25%U | 58.80 | 66.61 | 83.39 | 55.26 | 62.67 | 78.83 | 23.87 | 27.36 | 39.13 |
B4 -−25%U | 72.02 | 81.44 | 97.58 | 68.06 | 77.02 | 92.44 | 31.68 | 36.14 | 45.21 |
B1 −20%W | 62.29 | 70.51 | 87.18 | 58.64 | 66.45 | 82.49 | 25.69 | 29.43 | 41.63 |
B2 −20%W | 75.30 | 82.95 | 101.72 | 71.25 | 78.38 | 96.49 | 33.89 | 38.54 | 47.73 |
B3 −20%W | 48.76 | 55.11 | 68.10 | 46.05 | 52.11 | 64.63 | 21.73 | 24.91 | 34.17 |
B4 −20%W | 79.34 | 89.27 | 106.67 | 75.27 | 84.78 | 101.41 | 37.75 | 43.12 | 52.92 |
B1 | 62.42 | 70.69 | 88.07 | 58.82 | 66.67 | 83.43 | 26.42 | 30.17 | 43.16 |
B2 | 75.60 | 82.99 | 102.65 | 71.60 | 78.46 | 97.47 | 34.66 | 39.40 | 49.19 |
B3 | 65.55 | 74.14 | 92.27 | 61.96 | 70.16 | 87.66 | 29.77 | 34.14 | 47.32 |
B4 | 79.53 | 89.57 | 107.42 | 75.51 | 85.12 | 102.23 | 38.85 | 43.90 | 54.27 |
B1 +20%W | 62.65 | 70.99 | 89.06 | 59.09 | 67.02 | 84.46 | 27.19 | 30.98 | 44.74 |
B2 +20%W | 74.06 | 82.97 | 103.70 | 72.04 | 78.62 | 98.57 | 35.47 | 40.31 | 50.69 |
B3 +20%W | 65.72 | 74.39 | 93.19 | 62.17 | 70.44 | 88.62 | 30.43 | 34.90 | 48.80 |
B4 +20%W | 82.39 | 89.01 | 111.05 | 78.34 | 87.56 | 105.83 | 40.91 | 46.20 | 57.45 |
B1 +25%U | 68.73 | 77.73 | 96.33 | 65.08 | 73.67 | 91.65 | 31.91 | 36.73 | 50.87 |
B2 +25%U | 80.83 | 90.54 | 111.64 | 76.72 | 85.99 | 106.42 | 40.85 | 46.48 | 57.48 |
B3 +25%U | 72.42 | 81.79 | 101.29 | 68.79 | 77.76 | 96.63 | 35.93 | 41.20 | 55.73 |
B4 +25%U | 87.14 | 95.73 | 117.37 | 83.07 | 91.18 | 112.12 | 41.36 | 47.24 | 58.26 |
Energy Efficiency Class | Limit Values of the Energy Need for Heating Indicator EUH [kWh/m2 year] | ||
---|---|---|---|
A | EUH ≤ | 45 | |
B | 45 | < EUH ≤ | 65 |
C | 65 | < EUH ≤ | 95 |
D | 95 | < EUH ≤ | 130 |
E | 130 | < EUH ≤ | 185 |
F | 185 | < EUH ≤ | 265 |
G | 265 | < EUH |
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Kwiatkowski, J.; Rucińska, J. Estimation of Energy Efficiency Class Limits for Multi-Family Residential Buildings in Poland. Energies 2020, 13, 6234. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236234
Kwiatkowski J, Rucińska J. Estimation of Energy Efficiency Class Limits for Multi-Family Residential Buildings in Poland. Energies. 2020; 13(23):6234. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236234
Chicago/Turabian StyleKwiatkowski, Jerzy, and Joanna Rucińska. 2020. "Estimation of Energy Efficiency Class Limits for Multi-Family Residential Buildings in Poland" Energies 13, no. 23: 6234. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236234
APA StyleKwiatkowski, J., & Rucińska, J. (2020). Estimation of Energy Efficiency Class Limits for Multi-Family Residential Buildings in Poland. Energies, 13(23), 6234. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13236234