4.7 Article

Energy use in the life cycle of conventional and low-energy buildings: A review article

Journal

ENERGY AND BUILDINGS
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 249-257

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2006.07.001

Keywords

life cycle; operating energy; embodied energy; low-energy; solar house; passive house

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A literature survey on buildings' life cycle energy use was performed, resulting in a total of 60 cases from nine countries. The cases included both residential and non-residential units. Despite climate and other background differences, the study revealed a linear relation between operating and total energy valid through all the cases. Case studies on buildings built according to different design criteria, and at parity of all other conditions, showed that design of low-energy buildings induces both a net benefit in total life cycle energy demand and an increase in the embodied energy. A solar house proved to be more energy efficient than an equivalent house built with commitment to use green materials. Also, the same solar house decreased life cycle energy demand by a factor of two with respect to an equivalent conventional version, when operating energy was expressed as end-use energy and the lifetime assumed to be 50 years. A passive house proved to be more energy efficient than an equivalent self-sufficient solar house. Also, the same passive house decreased life cycle energy demand by a factor of three - expected to rise to four in a new version - with respect to an equivalent conventional version, when operating energy was expressed as primary energy and the lifetime assumed to be 80 years. (C) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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