Reduction Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from High-Speed Railway Station Buildings in a Cold Climate Zone of China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background and Related Studies
2.1. HSRS in China
2.1.1. Driving Policies and Regulations
2.1.2. Characteristics of HSRS Buildings and Climate Zones in China
2.1.3. Field Investigation and Questionnaire
- For medium-sized HSRS buildings, the width is usually from 145 m to 206 m, as well as depth being from 20 to 44 m. The average roof height is approximately 26 m, which is larger in buildings of a super large or large size. There are overcrowded passengers in station (10) but few in station (2), and the capacity design is shown to be not consistent with the scale.
- The height above the enclosed waiting room cannot be used efficiently, since they consume energy for operation, which reflects low utilization of vertical space.
- No thermal partitions are set up in waiting rooms. The HVAC system works for a centralized large room and can’t be controlled in a modular way according to the pedestrian volume.
- The glass curtain wall makes the building transparent; however, the shading devices seem not to be enough in summer seasons.
2.2. GHG Emission Reduction Strategies for Buildings
3. Methodology
3.1. Life Cycle GHG Emissions Calculation
3.1.1. Goal and Scope
3.1.2. Data Sources
3.1.3. Material Inventories and Levels of Detail
3.2. Implementation of Sensitivity Analysis in Building Models
3.3. BIM-LCA Approach
4. Case-TJS
4.1. Case Description
4.2. Parameter Setting for Simulation
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. LCCO2eq by Life Cycle Module
5.2. Embodied GHG Emissions of Building Materials
5.2.1. Embodied GHG Emissions by Building Elements
5.2.2. Embodied GHG Emissions by Construction Materials
5.3. Reduction Strategies of Life Cycle GHG Emissions
5.3.1. Reduction Strategies of Operational GHG Emissions
Optimizing Building Space
Optimizing Building Envelope
5.3.2. Reduction Strategies of Embodied Emissions
Substitution of Construction Materials
Service Life Extension of Insulation Material
5.3.3. Reduction Potential Analysis of Life Cycle GHG Emissions
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- Emission reduction measures in an HSRS building should focus more on space design in the early stage of architectural design. Although the GHG emission mitigation strategy related to the substitution of materials presents the lowest potential for total GHG emissions reduction, significant embodied emission reduction can be achieved by choosing insulation materials with longer service life.
- (2)
- The LCCO2eq of an HSRS building for design analysis were assessed using 3 system boundaries: life cycle modules A1–A3 and B4 for the production and replacement of building materials, and life cycle module B6 for operational energy use. The BIM-LCA approach shows how modelling tools help analysis identify in GHG reduction strategies in complex buildings such as HSRS.
- (3)
- The main objective of the GHG reduction strategies in HSRS buildings is to minimize the total GHG emissions related to operational energy and, ultimately, the embodied emissions from materials.
- (4)
- The drivers for the highest embodied GHG emissions were from concrete, steel, and insulation materials used in the main load bearing structures and outer wall components.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code * | HSRS | Capacity (Person) | GFA (m2) | Space (m) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Width | Depth | Height | ||||
(1) | Beijing South railway station | 10,500 | 252,000 | 350 | 195 | 40 |
(2) | Tianjin West railway station | 5000 | 104,000 | 400 | 145 | 57 |
(3) | Jinan West railway station | 4000 | 100,000 | 192 | 107 | 44 |
(4) | Langfang railway station | 1000 | 9889 | 170 | 36 | 20 |
(5) | Tianjin South railway station | 1000 | 8669 | 145 | 20 | 30 |
(6) | Cangzhou West railway station | 1200 | 10,213 | 168 | 34 | 22 |
(7) | Dezhou East railway station | 2000 | 19,810 | 206 | 34 | 30 |
(8) | Qufu East railway station | 1500 | 9996 | 206 | 35 | 28 |
(9) | Zaozhuang railway station | 1000 | 9965 | 185 | 37 | 21 |
(10) | Xuzhou East railway station | 2500 | 14,984 | 164 | 44 | 28 |
Material Type | C30 Reinforced Concrete | Steel | Cement | Sand | Stone |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unit | kgCO2eq/m3 | kgCO2eq/t | kgCO2eq/t | kgCO2eq/t | kgCO2eq/t |
CO2eq Emission Data | 295 | 2340 | 735 | 2.51 | 5.08 |
Design Parameters | Values | ||
---|---|---|---|
Occupancy Density (Persons/m2) | 0.12 (Waiting Room) | ||
HVAC system | Heating | Heating design temperature | 18 °C (waiting room) |
SCOP | 4.0 (GSHP, electricity) | ||
Operating schedule | 15th November–15th March; 5:00–23:00 on | ||
Cooling | Cooling design temperature | 28 °C (waiting room) | |
SEER | 4.8 (GSHP, electricity) | ||
Operating schedule | 15th May–15th September; 5:00–23:00 on | ||
Mechanical ventilation–air exchange | 2–3/h | ||
Minimum fresh air (l/s·person) | 2.778 | ||
Lighting efficiency | Illuminance (lux) | 200 (waiting room) | |
Power density (w/m2) | 8 (waiting room)/6 (others) | ||
Operating schedule | 5:00–23:00 every day, whole year | ||
DHW | Consumption rate (l/m2·day) | 0.4 |
Life Cycle Module A1–A3 | Life Cycle Module B4 | Life Cycle Module A1–A3, B4 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CO2eq Emissions (kgCO2eq/m2·a) | Percentage (%) | CO2eq Emissions (kgCO2eq/m2·a) | Percentage (%) | CO2eq Emissions (kgCO2eq/m2·a) | Percentage (%) | |
Groundwork, foundations | 0.58 | 3.56 | 0 | 0 | 0.58 | 2.67 |
Load bearing structure | 5.65 | 34.61 | 0 | 0 | 5.65 | 25.98 |
Outer walls | 6.19 | 37.92 | 4.17 | 77.13 | 10.37 | 47.68 |
Inner walls | 0.60 | 3.69 | 0 | 0 | 0.60 | 2.76 |
Floor structure | 1.68 | 10.29 | 0.47 | 8.77 | 2.16 | 9.93 |
Outer roof | 1.62 | 9.92 | 0.76 | 14.10 | 2.38 | 10.94 |
Total | 16.34 | 100 | 5.41 | 100 | 21.75 | 100 |
Design Variables | Range/Values | Number of Design Options | SRC Value | Case Building | Optimal Solution | |
1 | External wall construction (insulation thickness) | 0.5 cm (U = 0.56 W/m2·K) | 4 options | 0.42 | ||
1.0 cm (U = 0.42 W/m2·K) | • * | |||||
2.0 cm (U = 0.27 W/m2·K) | ||||||
3.0 cm (U = 0.20 W/m2·K) | • | |||||
2 | Outer roof construction (insulation thickness) | 0.5 cm (U = 0.64 W/m2·K) | 4 options | 0.39 | ||
1.0 cm (U = 0.33 W/m2·K) | • | |||||
2.0 cm (U = 0.17 W/m2·K) | • | |||||
3.0 cm (U = 0.12 W/m2·K) | ||||||
3 | Glazing type (U-value) | Double low-E insulated glazing (U = 1.4 W/m2·K, SHGC = 0.30) | 4 options | 0.87 | • | |
Double low-E coated glazing (U = 1.7 W/m2·K, SHGC = 0.50) | ||||||
Double low-E glazing (U = 2.2 W/m2·K, SHGC = 0.63) | • | |||||
Double clear float glazing (U = 2.8 W/m2·K, SHGC = 0.70) | ||||||
4 | Local shading (projection louver) | 0 | 4 options | 0.19 | • | |
0.5 m | ||||||
1.0 m | ||||||
1.5 m | • |
Single Strategies | Embodied GHG Emissions | Operational GHG Emissions | Total Life Cycle GHG Emissions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Module A1–A3 | Module B4 | Total Modules | |||
Case building (H1/ A1/ UG1/ S1/ E1) | 16.34 | 5.41 | 21.75 | 93.73 | 115.48 |
H2 = 25 m | 15.58 | 5.06 | 20.64 | 83.54 | 104.18 |
H3 = 20 m | 14.63 | 4.45 | 19.08 | 78.98 | 98.06 |
Reduction (%) * | −10.5% | −17.7% | −12.3% | −15.7% | −15.0% |
A2 = 1313 m2 | 16.34 | 5.41 | 21.75 | 76.39 | 98.14 |
A3 = 657 m2 | 16.34 | 5.41 | 21.75 | 70.46 | 92.21 |
Reduction (%) * | - | - | - | −24.8% | −20.1% |
UG2 = 1.7 W/m2·K | 15.79 | 4.86 | 20.65 | 90.15 | 110.80 |
UG3 = 1.4 W/m2·K | 15.60 | 4.67 | 20.27 | 86.51 | 106.78 |
Reduction (%) * | −4.5% | −13.6% | −6.8% | −7.7% | −7.5% |
S2 = 15% recycled concrete + steel | 15.93 | 5.41 | 21.34 | 93.73 | 115.07 |
S3 = 30% recycled concrete + steel | 15.52 | 5.41 | 20.93 | 93.73 | 114.66 |
Reduction (%) * | −5.0% | - | −3.7% | - | −0.7% |
E2 = 35, service life | 16.34 | 5.41 | 21.75 | 93.73 | 115.48 |
E3 = 50, service life | 16.34 | 2.15 | 18.49 | 93.73 | 112.22 |
Reduction (%) * | - | −60.2% | −15.0% | - | −2.8% |
Space Optimization (H3, A3 in Table 1) | Envelope Optimization (Optimal Solution in Table 1) | Material Optimization (S3, E3 in Table 1) | |
---|---|---|---|
A1–A3 | 14.63 | 15.60 | 15.52 |
B4 | 4.45 | 4.67 | 2.15 |
B6 | 63.80 | 80.01 | 93.73 |
Embodied GHG emissions | 19.08 | 20.27 | 17.67 |
Total GHG emissions | 82.88 | 100.28 | 111.4 |
Reduction (%) * | –28.2% | –13.1% | –3.5% |
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Wang, N.; Satola, D.; Houlihan Wiberg, A.; Liu, C.; Gustavsen, A. Reduction Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from High-Speed Railway Station Buildings in a Cold Climate Zone of China. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051704
Wang N, Satola D, Houlihan Wiberg A, Liu C, Gustavsen A. Reduction Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from High-Speed Railway Station Buildings in a Cold Climate Zone of China. Sustainability. 2020; 12(5):1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051704
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Nan, Daniel Satola, Aoife Houlihan Wiberg, Conghong Liu, and Arild Gustavsen. 2020. "Reduction Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from High-Speed Railway Station Buildings in a Cold Climate Zone of China" Sustainability 12, no. 5: 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051704
APA StyleWang, N., Satola, D., Houlihan Wiberg, A., Liu, C., & Gustavsen, A. (2020). Reduction Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from High-Speed Railway Station Buildings in a Cold Climate Zone of China. Sustainability, 12(5), 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051704