Cities often show nighttime air temperatures higher by 3–4 ◦C than adjacent non-urban areas. This yields to cooling loads in average higher by 13% for urban than rural buildings. Here we assess the hygrothermal performance and the heating and cooling loads of a reference building representative of the Italian stock. We compare its performance calculated with hourly urban weather data (2002–2008) with the performance of the same building using a rural dataset instead. Milan’s Urban Heat Island reduces the heating loads by 12% and 16%, for the non-insulated and insulated building, respectively, while the cooling loads are increased by 41% and 39%. The urban building also shows dehumidification loads 74–78% lower than the rural building. Moreover, during the 2003 heat wave, the indoor air temperature is computed to be 1.5 ◦C–2.2 ◦C higher in a non-conditioned urban building than in the rural one. This increases the wakefulness, occupants’ vulnerability to overheating, and impacts the overall hygrothermal performance. Our findings highlight the need of a different design concept for urban with respect to non-urban buildings, even though they are, by law, in the same climate zone.
The hygrothermal performance of residential buildings at urban and rural sites: Sensible and latent energy loads and indoor environmental conditions
CASTALDO, VERONICA LUCIA;PISELLO, ANNA LAURA;COTANA, Franco
2016
Abstract
Cities often show nighttime air temperatures higher by 3–4 ◦C than adjacent non-urban areas. This yields to cooling loads in average higher by 13% for urban than rural buildings. Here we assess the hygrothermal performance and the heating and cooling loads of a reference building representative of the Italian stock. We compare its performance calculated with hourly urban weather data (2002–2008) with the performance of the same building using a rural dataset instead. Milan’s Urban Heat Island reduces the heating loads by 12% and 16%, for the non-insulated and insulated building, respectively, while the cooling loads are increased by 41% and 39%. The urban building also shows dehumidification loads 74–78% lower than the rural building. Moreover, during the 2003 heat wave, the indoor air temperature is computed to be 1.5 ◦C–2.2 ◦C higher in a non-conditioned urban building than in the rural one. This increases the wakefulness, occupants’ vulnerability to overheating, and impacts the overall hygrothermal performance. Our findings highlight the need of a different design concept for urban with respect to non-urban buildings, even though they are, by law, in the same climate zone.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.