NZEB Renovation Definition in a Heating Dominated Climate: Case Study of Poland
Abstract
:Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. General NZEB Definition for Buildings Undergoing Major Renovations
- (a)
- the total cost of the renovation relating to the building envelope or the technical building systems is higher than 25% of the value of the building, excluding the value of the land upon which the building is situated; or
- (b)
- more than 25% of the surface of the building envelope undergoes renovation.
- (a)
- The energy performance of the building after renovation fulfils the NZEB requirements for new buildings as they are defined at level of the EU MS and regions; and/or
- (b)
- The primary energy consumption of the building after renovation is reduced by 75% as comparing to the pre-renovation status; and/or
- (c)
- Potentially an additional primary energy minimum requirement of not more than 50–60 kWh/(m2 year) energy consumption [13] for heating/cooling, domestic hot water, ventilation energy consumption of auxiliary building’s systems; and
- (d)
- Potentially an additional minimum requirement for renewable energy share (proposed to be at least 50% of the remaining energy demand of the building as it is suggested in [14] taking into account the NZEB definition from EPBD; and
- (e)
- Potentially an additional minimum CO2 requirement of no more than 3 kg CO2/(m2 year) as it is suggested in [14] based on the needs to meet the long-term decarbonisation goals for residential and services sectors as resulted from the EU 2050 Roadmap for a low-carbon economy.
1.2. Country-Specific Definitions
- energy need for heating QH ≤ 18 kWh/(m² year);
- primary energy demand QP ≤ 54 kWh/(m² year), for heating, domestic hot water (DHW) and auxiliary electricity;
- summertime comfort (overheating risk), excessive temperature frequency (>25 °C) ≤5%; and
- air tightness of the building envelope: n50 ≤ 0.72 h−1.
- energy need for heating QH ≤ 25 kWh/(m² year), where the requirement for primary energy may be met only by means of a distinctly higher actual share of RES (an envisaged increase from 25 to 50%) in the overall final energy for the operation of the systems in the building;
- energy need for heating QH ≤ 15 kWh/(m² year), if the technical possibilities for the use of RES at the building’s location are insufficient;
- primary energy demand QP ≤ 95 kWh/(m² year)—single-family houses, the requirements apply to the total sum of energy for the heating, ventilation, DHW and cooling;
- primary energy demand QP ≤ 90 kWh/(m² year)—multi-family buildings; and
- primary energy demand QP ≤ 65 kWh/(m² year)—non-residential buildings.
- energy need for heating QH ≤ 50 kWh/(m² year) depending on the building shape factor—single-family building QH ≤ 40.7 kWh/(m² year), multi-family buildings QH ≤ 25 kWh/(m² year), office buildings QH ≤ 26.8 kWh/(m² year); and
- primary energy demand—single-family building QP ≤ 54 kWh/(m² year), multi-family buildings QP ≤ 32 kWh/(m² year), office buildings QP ≤ 60 kWh/(m² year); the requirements apply to the total sum of energy for the heating, DHW, cooling, ventilation, and in-house lightning.
1.3. Potential Indicators of the NZEB Renovation Definition: Results of a Survey
- The energy need for heating QH, expressed in kWh/(m² year); and
- The percentage of reduction of primary non-renewable energy demand QP, (including heating, ventilation, domestic hot water (DHW), and auxiliary systems for the case of residential buildings), determined in relation to the energy demand of building before renovation. According to the EC recommendation 2016/1318 [11] QP should also include energy used for cooling and lightning although this was deliberately excluded in the study. Most of the existing SFH do not use cooling and lighting as it is calculated in non-residential buildings.
- Electricity: AT: 1.91, ES: 1.89, IT: 2.18, RO: 2.53, FR: 2.72, DE: 2.45, and FI: 2.69;
- Gas: AT: 1.13, ES, IT, RO, FR, DE, and FI: 1.0;
- District heating: AT: 1.0, ES, IT, RO, FR, DE: 1.20, and FI: 0.7; and
- Heating oil: IT: 1.0, CH: 1.15, and AT: 1.12.
2. Calculation Methodology
- calculation of the cost optimum U-values for renovated elements of the building envelope; and
- finding the cost optimal renovation variant of building models.
2.1. Stage I—Cost-Optimal U-Values for Renovated Elements of the Building Envelope
- kRd,j—unit cumulative cost for the renovation variant j, EUR/m2;
- kM,j—renovation cost of the external building element for variant j, EUR/m2;
- kE,j—annual cost of energy losses transferred through 1 m2 of the element for variant j in the base year (depends on the thermal insulation of the external element, climate conditions and the cost of heat), EUR; and
- Rdi(i)—the discount factor for the year i, depending on the rate of inflation, the increase in the prices of energy and the discount rate.
- Pv—tax on goods and services (8%), EUR/m2;
- Rj—labour cost depending on building element type, insulation technique and thickness, EUR/m2; and
- Mj—the cost of direct and auxiliary materials along with purchase costs (5.9%), EUR/m2.
- Uj—heat transfer coefficient for the variant j, W/m2 K;
- Sd—heating degree days (HDD), Kd; and
- E—energy cost, EUR/GJ.
- Rd(i) — sum of discount factors for the year i,
- d—discount rate;
- s—annual inflation rate;
- e—energy price increase rate over the inflation rate in the analysed period; and
- n—number of years (lifetime of 30 years is considered).
2.2. Stage II—Cost-Optimal Renovation Variant of the Single-Family Houses
3. Building Models
- a one-storey building with an attic (numerical model only); and
- a typical two-storey building with a flat roof (numerical model based on a real existing building).
3.1. The Two-Storey Building with a Flat Roof
3.2. The One-Storey Building with an Attic
4. Cost-Optimal Heat Transfer Coefficients of Renovated Building Envelope
- First variant (W1)—the building envelope was renovated according to the cost-optimum thermal transmittance specified for energy price of 4.7 EUR per GJ; and
- Second variant (W2)—the building envelope was renovated according to the cost-optimum thermal transmittance specified for energy price of 14.3 EUR per GJ.
5. Cost-Optimal Building Renovation Variant
- W0: baseline variant, existing model buildings and systems before renovation;
- W1: variant I of building envelope renovation; energy price 4.7 EUR per 1 GJ;
- W2: variant II of building envelope renovation; energy price 14.3 EUR per 1 GJ;
- G: natural ventilation, improved base case but with no reduction of the energy loss through ventilation;
- H: hybrid ventilation, it was assumed that the energy loss through ventilation will be reduced by 20%;
- R: mechanical ventilation with heat recovery, efficiency of heat recovery: 90%; and
- S: solar system used for DHW heating, assumed coverage between 50–60% of DHW energy demand.
- For both building types at a low energy cost of EUR 4.7 per GJ, the renovation variant W1/G was optimal. It is a variant including improved natural ventilation and the following heat transfer coefficients (U) of external buildings elements: external walls: 0.19–0.21 W/m2 K, suspended floor: 0.24 W/m2 K, flat roof: 0.22 W/m2 K, pitched roof: 0.18 W/m2 K, floor above unheated basement: 0.25 W/m2 K, windows: 0.9 W/m2 K, and external doors: 1.3 W/m2 K;
- At the energy cost of EUR 9.5 per GJ, the renovation variant W2/G was optimal for both building types. In this case the variant involves improved natural ventilation and the following heat transfer coefficients (U) of external buildings elements: external walls: 0.12 W/m2 K, suspended on the ground: 0.14 W/m2 K, flat roof: 0.12 W/m2 K, pitched roof: 0.10 W/m2 K, floor above unheated basement: 0.19 W/m2 K, windows: 0.9 W/m2 K, and external doors: 0.9 W/m2 K; and
- In the case of EUR 14.3 per GJ for both building types the optimal variant is W2/S. which takes into account solar collector installations supporting the preparation of domestic hot water. Some differences can be seen in regard to ventilation. In the case of the two-storey building with flat roof, mechanical ventilation with heat recovery is cost-effective in Suwałki (the coldest location) whereas, for the second building, the use of hybrid ventilation is optimum for all locations.
6. Results and Discussion
- According to the EU Regulation [34,35] “In cases where the outcome of the cost-optimal calculations gives the same global costs for different levels of energy performance, Member States are encouraged to use the requirements resulting in lower use of primary energy as the basis for comparison with the existing minimum energy performance requirements” (Annex I, Cap. 6-2). The NZEB level should be higher or equal to the cost-optimal.
- According to [30] the NZEB target was obtained incrementing by 10 kWh/m2/year the minimum primary energy achieved by the best building variant (from the energy point of view).
- Ferrara et al. [49] show how to find the cost-optimal level for the French single-family building typology. According to the conclusions finding the cost-optimal building configuration is more important from regulatory perspective than NZEB definition.
- The cost-optimal is focused on costs while the NZEB prioritizes the energy performance and the use of renewable energy harvested on site [63].
- A significant part of NZEB solutions, for every building and every climate zones, are within the range of 0 to 15 kWh/(m² year) [50].
- The energy need for heating QH ≤ 60 kWh/(m² year); and
- The percentage of reduction of the non-renewable, primary energy QP demand (including in case of residential buildings heating, ventilation, DHW and auxiliary systems) ≥75%.
- The energy need for heating QH ≤ 40 kWh/(m² year); and
- The percentage of reduction of the non-renewable, primary energy QP demand (including in case of residential buildings heating, ventilation, DHW and auxiliary systems) ≥80%.
7. Conclusions
- QH ≤ 18 kWh/(m² year): Belgium (Brussels); and
- QH ≤ 15 kWh/(m² year): Slovenia.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Energy Need for Heating QH | Primary Energy Demand QP | Final Energy Demand QF | CO2-Emissions | Summertime Comfort | Air Tightness | Thermal Transmittance of Fabrics Elements | Systems Efficiency |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Austria | ||||||||
Belgium (Brussels) | ||||||||
Germany | ||||||||
Ireland | ||||||||
Slovenia | ||||||||
Portugal | ||||||||
Slovak Republic | ||||||||
Italy | ||||||||
France | ||||||||
Luxembourg | ||||||||
Sweden |
Should the NZEB Renovation Definition Include Requirements Regarding: | Yes | No | Importance (Yes Votes Less No Votes) |
---|---|---|---|
Index of energy need for heating QH | 15 | 2 | 13 |
Energy efficiency of renovation improvement—percentage reduction of the primary, non-renewable energy QP demand | 13 | 3 | 10 |
Thermal transmittance (U-value) of diverse building elements | 12 | 4 | 8 |
Index of non-renewable, primary energy demand QP | 12 | 5 | 7 |
CO2 emission index | 10 | 5 | 5 |
Index of final (delivered) energy demand QF | 10 | 6 | 4 |
Share of RES | 10 | 7 | 3 |
Ventilation systems and the efficiencies of heat recovery | 9 | 6 | 3 |
Efficiencies of heating and DHW systems | 9 | 6 | 3 |
Index of final (delivered) energy demand QF for cooling | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Air tightness | 7 | 7 | 0 |
Energy demand of auxiliary systems | 6 | 8 | −2 |
Summertime comfort—overheating risk | 5 | 9 | −4 |
City | HDD, Kd |
---|---|
OPOLE | 3488 |
GORZÓW WIEL | 3548 |
GDAŃSK | 3597 |
POZNAŃ | 3672 |
WARSZAWA | 3686 |
ŁÓDŹ | 3696 |
TORUŃ | 3697 |
WROCŁAW | 3716 |
ZIELONA GÓRA | 3724 |
KATOWICE | 3743 |
KRAKÓW | 3748 |
LUBLIN | 3825 |
KIELCE | 3835 |
SZCZECIN | 3879 |
RZESZÓW | 3936 |
BYDGOSZCZ | 3941 |
BIAŁYSTOK | 4095 |
OLSZTYN | 4117 |
Energy Carrier | Price with Tax | Calorific Value | Price with Tax | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Value | Unit | in MJ | Unit | in kWh | Unit | EUR per GJ | EUR per kWh | |
Electrical energy (tariff G-11) | 0.13 | EUR/kWh | - | - | - | - | 36.38 | 0.130 |
Firewood | 35.71 | EUR/m3 | 7200 | MJ/mp | 2000 | kWh/m3 | 4.96 | 0.019 |
Wooden pellet | 0.20 | EUR/kg | 19.0 | MJ/kg | 5.28 | kWh/kg | 10.78 | 0.038 |
Hard coal | 0.18 | EUR/kg | 29.0 | MJ/kg | 8.06 | kWh/kg | 6.32 | 0.024 |
Eco-pea coal | 0.21 | EUR/kg | 27.5 | MJ/kg | 7.64 | kWh/kg | 7.79 | 0.029 |
Heating oil | 0.58 | EUR/L | 39.0 | MJ/L | 10.83 | kWh/L | 14.77 | 0.052 |
Natural gas (tariff W-3) | 0.38 | EUR/m3 | 39.5 | MJ/m3 | 10.97 | kWh/m3 | 9.65 | 0.036 |
LPG (liquid gas) | 0.38 | EUR/L | 24.0 | MJ/L | 6.67 | kWh/L | 18.39 | 0.057 |
Energy Source | Seasonal Efficiency | Price with Tax | |
---|---|---|---|
% | EUR per GJ | EUR per kWh | |
Condensing, gas boiler | 94 | 10.27 | 0.038 |
Pellet boiler | 85 | 12.68 | 0.045 |
Wood boiler | 82 | 6.05 | 0.023 |
Eco-pea coal boiler | 82 | 9.50 | 0.035 |
Oil boiler | 87 | 16.98 | 0.060 |
LPG boiler | 87 | 21.14 | 0.066 |
Electric radiators | 99 | 36.75 | 0.131 |
Year of Construction | Buildings | Dwellings | Primary Energy * | Final (Delivered) Energy | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thousands | % | mln. | % | kWh/(m2a) | kWh/(m2a) | |
before 1918 | 413.30 | 7.71 | 1.21 | 9.01 | >350 | >300 |
1918–1944 | 828.20 | 15.44 | 1.54 | 11.46 | 300–350 | 260–300 |
1945–1970 | 1367.50 | 25.50 | 3.71 | 27.62 | 250–300 | 220–260 |
1971–1978 | 676.50 | 12.61 | 2.16 | 16.08 | 210–250 | 190–220 |
1979–1988 | 763.50 | 14.24 | 2.20 | 16.38 | 160–210 | 140–190 |
1989–2002 | 698.40 | 13.02 | 1.52 | 11.31 | 140–180 | 125–160 |
2003–2010 | 616.02 | 11.48 | 1.09 | 8.14 | 100–150 | 90–120 |
All | 5,363.42 | 100.0 | 13.43 | 100.0 |
Number of Storeys | 3 | Units |
---|---|---|
Gross covered area | 107.0 | m2 |
Heated part volume | 326.0 | m3 |
Heated area | 125.4 | m2 |
Shape factor | 0.57 | m−1 |
Element | Quantity | Unit | U |
---|---|---|---|
W/m2 K | |||
External wall | 198.9 | m2 | 0.82 |
Floor above unheated basement | 63.6 | m2 | 1.02 |
Flat roof | 65.0 | m2 | 0.69 |
Windows | 27.2 | m2 | 2.60 |
External door | 1 | pcs. | 2.60 |
Number of Storeys | 2 | Units |
---|---|---|
Gross covered area | 84.0 | m2 |
Heated part volume | 420.0 | m3 |
Heated area | 121.9 | m2 |
Shape factor | 0.85 | m−1 |
Element | Quantity | Unit | U |
---|---|---|---|
W/m2 K | |||
External wall | 162.5 | m2 | 1.03 |
Suspended floor | 84.0 | m2 | 0.73 |
Pitched roof | 96.7 | m2 | 0.72 |
Windows | 31.2 | m2 | 2.60 |
External door | 1 | pcs. | 2.60 |
U-Value, Insulation Cost and Energy Loss Per M2 for External Wall Depending on Insulation Thickness | Heating Energy Cost in EUR Per 1 GJ | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4.7 | 7.1 | 9.5 | 11.9 | 14.3 | |||||
d | U-Value | K | KVAT | Energy Loss | Discounted, Cumulative Cost in EUR per m2 | ||||
cm | W/(m2 K) | EUR/m2 | EUR/m2 | GJ/(m2year) | KRd_4.7 | KRd_7.1 | KRd_9.5 | KRd_11.9 | KRd_14.3 |
0 | 0.820 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.262 | 31.52 | 47.29 | 63.05 | 78.81 | 94.57 |
10 | 0.231 | 23.79 | 25.70 | 0.074 | 34.52 | 39.05 | 43.33 | 47.86 | 52.38 |
12 | 0.202 | 24.66 | 26.63 | 0.065 | 34.40 | 38.33 | 42.14 | 46.19 | 50.00 |
14 | 0.180 | 25.52 | 27.56 | 0.058 | 34.52 | 37.86 | 41.43 | 45.00 | 48.33 |
16 | 0.163 | 26.38 | 28.50 | 0.052 | 34.76 | 37.74 | 40.95 | 44.05 | 47.14 |
18 | 0.148 | 27.25 | 29.43 | 0.047 | 35.00 | 37.86 | 40.71 | 43.57 | 46.43 |
20 | 0.136 | 28.11 | 30.36 | 0.043 | 35.48 | 38.10 | 40.60 | 43.21 | 45.95 |
22 | 0.125 | 29.06 | 31.38 | 0.040 | 36.19 | 38.57 | 40.95 | 43.33 | 45.95 |
24 | 0.117 | 29.90 | 32.29 | 0.037 | 36.67 | 39.05 | 41.19 | 43.57 | 45.71 |
26 | 0.109 | 30.95 | 33.42 | 0.035 | 37.62 | 39.76 | 41.90 | 43.81 | 45.95 |
28 | 0.102 | 31.79 | 34.34 | 0.033 | 38.33 | 40.24 | 42.14 | 44.05 | 46.19 |
30 | 0.096 | 32.64 | 35.25 | 0.031 | 39.05 | 40.71 | 42.62 | 44.52 | 46.43 |
Building Element | W1—4.7 EUR per 1 GJ | W2—14.3 EUR per 1 GJ | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | |
cm | W/(m2 K) | cm | W/(m2 K) | |||||
External wall | 12 | 0.206 | 26.63 | EUR/m2 | 24 | 0.118 | 32.29 | EUR/m2 |
Floor above an unheated cellar | 7 | 0.247 | 12.60 | EUR/m2 | 10 | 0.187 | 18.00 | EUR/m2 |
Suspended floor | 14 | 0.235 | 30.82 | EUR/m2 | 26 | 0.144 | 36.74 | EUR/m2 |
Flat roof | 12 | 0.217 | 20.42 | EUR/m2 | 26 | 0.121 | 26.50 | EUR/m2 |
Pitched roof | 20 | 0.177 | 33.73 | EUR/m2 | 35 | 0.097 | 39.02 | EUR/m2 |
Windows | - | 0.9 | 133.90 | EUR/m2 | - | 0.9 | 133.90 | EUR/m2 |
External doors | - | 1.3 | 973.27 | EUR/pcs. | - | 0.9 | 1035.08 | EUR/pcs. |
Building Element | W1—4.7 EUR per 1 GJ | W2—14.3 EUR per 1 GJ | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | |
cm | W/(m2 K) | cm | W/(m2 K) | |||||
External wall | 14 | 0.183 | 27.56 | EUR/m2 | 24 | 0.118 | 32.29 | EUR/m2 |
Floor above an unheated cellar | 7 | 0.247 | 12.60 | EUR/m2 | 10 | 0.187 | 18.00 | EUR/m2 |
Suspended floor | 14 | 0.235 | 30.82 | EUR/m2 | 30 | 0.128 | 38.71 | EUR/m2 |
Flat roof | 12 | 0.217 | 22.05 | EUR/m2 | 26 | 0.121 | 26.50 | EUR/m2 |
Pitched roof | 20 | 0.177 | 33.73 | EUR/m2 | 35 | 0.097 | 39.02 | EUR/m2 |
Windows | - | 0.9 | 133.90 | EUR/m2 | - | 0.9 | 133.90 | EUR/m2 |
External doors | - | 1.3 | 973.27 | EUR/pcs. | - | 0.9 | 1035.08 | EUR/pcs. |
Building Element | W1—4.7 EUR per 1 GJ | W2—14.3 EUR per 1 GJ | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | d | U-Value | Renovation Cost | Unit | |
cm | W/(m2 K) | cm | W/(m2 K) | |||||
External wall | 10 | 0.235 | 25.70 | EUR/m2 | 18 | 0.150 | 29.29 | EUR/m2 |
Floor above an unheated cellar | 3 | 0.438 | 7.71 | EUR/m2 | 7 | 0.248 | 12.60 | EUR/m2 |
Suspended floor | 10 | 0.297 | 28.85 | EUR/m2 | 20 | 0.179 | 33.78 | EUR/m2 |
Flat roof | 10 | 0.245 | 21.35 | EUR/m2 | 18 | 0.162 | 25.04 | EUR/m2 |
Pitched roof | 20 | 0.177 | 33.73 | EUR/m2 | 30 | 0.115 | 37.11 | EUR/m2 |
Windows | - | 1.3 | 108.76 | EUR/m2 | - | 0.9 | 133.90 | EUR/m2 |
External doors | - | 1.3 | 973.27 | EUR/pcs. | - | 0.9 | 1035.08 | EUR/pcs. |
Symbol | System | Base Case/Improvement Description |
---|---|---|
0 | Base heating system | total system energy efficiency including heat source: 0.64; auxiliary electrical energy: 0 kWh/year |
- | Modernization of heating system | replacement of heat source, exchange of radiators, assembly of radiator valves with thermostatic heads, assembly of automatic air vents and closed expansion vessel; total system energy efficiency including heat source: 0.89; modernization cost: 3071 EUR: 1-S; 3310 EUR: 2-S; auxiliary electrical energy: 372 kWh/year |
0 | Base DHW system | total system energy efficiency including heat source: 0.23; auxiliary electrical energy: 0 kWh/year |
- | Modernization of DHW system | exchange of DHW tank, insulation of pipes; total system energy efficiency including heat source: 0.43; modernization cost: 905 EUR; auxiliary electrical energy: 63 kWh/year |
0 | Base ventilation system | natural ventilation, masonry exhaust ducts, air supply window leaks |
G | Modernization of natural ventilation | supplying air to the house and removing air from it without using mechanical systems, air supplied by of trickle vents assembled in exchanged windows, removed by existing masonry exhaust ducks; modernization cost (trickle vents): 157 EUR: S-1; 214 EUR: S-2; energy loss through ventilation reduced by: 0%; auxiliary electrical energy: 0 kWh/year |
H | Hybrid ventilation | the ventilation is neither entirely natural, nor entirely mechanical, it works like natural ventilation, when weather conditions are favourable (pressure differences arising from natural forces is appropriate), and when they are not, it is by mechanically-supported exhaust ventilation, air supplied by trickle vents assembled in exchanged windows, removed by existing masonry exhaust ducks with low-speed automatic controlled vents, energy loss through ventilation reduced by: 20%; modernization cost: 1051 EUR: S-1, 1107 EUR: S-2; auxiliary electrical energy: 39 kWh/year |
R | Balanced ventilation with heat recovery | mechanical ventilation heat recovery, supplying air to the house and removing air from it with using mechanical systems, assembly of ventilation unit with heat recovery, exhaust and supply ducts, and air vents is needed; energy loss through ventilation reduced by: 90%; modernization cost: 5714 EUR: S-1; 5952 EUR: S-1; auxiliary electrical energy: 394 kWh/year |
S | Solar collectors for DHW | Assembly of solar collectors for DHW and tank; modernization cost: 2380 EUR; auxiliary electrical energy: 77 kWh/year |
Symbol of Renovation Variant | Description | Total Renovation Costs 1-S, EUR | Total Renovation Costs 2-S, EUR |
---|---|---|---|
W1/G | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Modernization of natural ventilation | 20,089 | 16,957 |
W1/G/S | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Modernization of natural ventilation Solar collectors for DHW | 22,470 | 19,338 |
W1/H | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Hybrid ventilation | 20,983 | 17,850 |
W1/H/S | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Hybrid ventilation Solar collectors for DHW | 23,364 | 20,231 |
W1/R | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Balanced ventilation with heat recovery | 25,885 | 22,695 |
W1/R/S | Variant I of building’s envelope renovation Balanced ventilation with heat recovery Solar collectors for DHW | 28,265 | 25,076 |
W2/G | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Modernization of natural ventilation | 21,929 | 18,884 |
W2/G/S | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Modernization of natural ventilation Solar collectors for DHW | 24,310 | 21,265 |
W2/H | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Hybrid ventilation | 22,823 | 19,777 |
W2/H/S | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Hybrid ventilation Solar collectors for DHW | 25,204 | 22,158 |
W2/R | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Balanced ventilation with heat recovery | 28,265 | 24,622 |
W2/R/S | Variant II of building’s envelope renovation Balanced ventilation with heat recovery Solar collectors for DHW | 30,105 | 27,003 |
Building Model | Location | Energy Price per 1 GJ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
4.7 EUR | 9.5 EUR | 14.3 EUR | ||
Cost-Optimum Renovation Variants | ||||
S-1 (one-storey building with an attic) | Warszawa | W1/G | W2/G | W2/H/S |
Szczecin | W1/G | W2/G | W2/H/S | |
Suwałki | W1/G | W2/G | W2/H/S | |
S-2 (two-storey building with flat roof) | Warszawa | W1/G | W2/G | W2/G/S |
Szczecin | W1/G | W2/G | W2/G/S | |
Suwałki | W1/G | W2/G | W2/R/S |
Building Model | Location | Energy Price per 1 GJ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
4.7 EUR | 9.5 EUR | 14.3 EUR | ||
QH (kWh/m2 year) | ||||
S-1 (one-storey building with an attic) | Warszawa | 66.0 | 48.5 | 41.7 |
Szczecin | 60.9 | 44.5 | 38.2 | |
Suwałki | 83.8 | 63.6 | 55.7 | |
S-2 (two-storey building with flat roof) | Warszawa | 72.9 | 55.6 | 55.6 |
Szczecin | 67.6 | 51.4 | 51.4 | |
Suwałki | 91.1 | 70.9 | 30.9 |
Building Model | Localization | QP Index for Base Variant [kWh/m2year] | Energy Price per 1 GJ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4.7 EUR | 9.5 EUR | 14.3 EUR | |||
QP Index for Renovation Variants (kWh/m2year) (Percentage Reduction in Regard to Base Variant (%)) | |||||
S-1 (one-storey building with an attic) | Warszawa | 574 | 138 (75%) | 117 (79%) | 88 (84%) |
Szczecin | 546 | 132 (75%) | 112 (78%) | 84 (84%) | |
Suwałki | 669 | 160 (75%) | 135 (79%) | 105 (83%) | |
S-2 (two-storey building with flat roof) | Warszawa | 448 | 137 (69%) | 116 (74%) | 96 (79%) |
Szczecin | 425 | 130 (69%) | 110 (74%) | 90 (79%) | |
Suwałki | 527 | 160 (70%) | 135 (74 %) | 74 (86%) |
© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Firląg, S.; Piasecki, M. NZEB Renovation Definition in a Heating Dominated Climate: Case Study of Poland. Appl. Sci. 2018, 8, 1605. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8091605
Firląg S, Piasecki M. NZEB Renovation Definition in a Heating Dominated Climate: Case Study of Poland. Applied Sciences. 2018; 8(9):1605. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8091605
Chicago/Turabian StyleFirląg, Szymon, and Michał Piasecki. 2018. "NZEB Renovation Definition in a Heating Dominated Climate: Case Study of Poland" Applied Sciences 8, no. 9: 1605. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8091605
APA StyleFirląg, S., & Piasecki, M. (2018). NZEB Renovation Definition in a Heating Dominated Climate: Case Study of Poland. Applied Sciences, 8(9), 1605. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8091605