4.3 Article

Multidisciplinary concurrent optimization framework for multi-phase building design process

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0890060422000191

Keywords

Building design optimization; building information modeling (BIM); concurrent engineering; daylighting; energy use; generative design; metamodels; multi-fidelity

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Modern building design projects require multidisciplinary expertise, but most design optimization efforts are limited by focusing on specific phases or disciplines. This paper proposes a computational building design platform that utilizes concurrent engineering techniques to overcome these limitations and optimize buildings across multiple phases.
Modern day building design projects require multidisciplinary expertise from architects and engineers across various phases of the design (conceptual, preliminary, and detailed) and construction processes. The Architecture Engineering and Construction (AEC) community has recently shifted gears toward leveraging design optimization techniques to make well-informed decisions in the design of buildings. However, most of the building design optimization efforts are either multidisciplinary optimization confined to just a specific design phase (conceptual/preliminary/detailed) or single disciplinary optimization (structural/thermal/daylighting/energy) spanning across multiple phases. Complexity in changing the optimization setup as the design progresses through subsequent phases, interoperability issues between modeling and physics-based analysis tools used at later stages, and the lack of an appropriate level of design detail to get meaningful results from these sophisticated analysis tools are few challenges that limit multi-phase multidisciplinary design optimization (MDO) in the AEC field. This paper proposes a computational building design platform leveraging concurrent engineering techniques such as interactive problem structuring, simulation-based optimization using meta models for energy and daylighting (machine learning based) and tradespace visualization. The proposed multi-phase concurrent MDO framework is demonstrated by using it to design and optimize a sample office building for energy and daylighting objectives across multiple phases. Furthermore, limitations of the proposed framework and future avenues of research are listed.

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