Spatially resolved indoor overheating evaluation using microscale meteorological simulation as input for building simulation – opportunities and limitations

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

To assess the spatial heat resilience of buildings in urban development we test the suitability of a toolchain approach from microscale meteorological simulations, resolving the spatial influences on local urban climate, to building performance simulations, evaluating the indoor overheating risk in buildings. This approach makes it possible to investigate how much microscale effects (e.g. buildings, trees e.g. roads) in open space influence the overheating intensity in a building depending on its location within a district. In this context, the question arises how realistic the microscale meteorological simulation is to be used as input for indoor overheating evaluation. In this context, we applied a 3D urban climate model (ENVI-met) and a 1D boundary layer model (HIRVAC) for two urban districts in Germany as meteorological input for an indoor thermal comfort evaluation of two representative buildings. The results demonstrate that ENVI-met simulations without using measured temperature data create unrealistically low diurnal variations in outdoor air temperature despite an overestimated solar irradiance. The implementation to building simulation leads to a significant underestimation of the heat resilience for both buildings and to wrong conclusions about the efficacy of passive heat adaptation measures. In contrast, the HIRVACsimulations show a more realistic representation of the meteorological variables (when measured data is used for calibration) but are not able to resolve urban 3D structures. Our findings point out that an adjusted boundary layer representation in microscale meteorological simulations is crucial to provide meteorological input suitable for realistic spatially resolved indoor overheating analysis.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number100122
Number of pages16
JournalCity and Environment Interactions
Volume20 (2023)
Publication statusPublished - 11 Oct 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-6686-3736/work/150327390
ORCID /0000-0002-9477-1652/work/150330055

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Building performance simulation, Climate adaptation, Heat stress, Overheating assessment, Toolchain, Urban microscale meteorological simulation