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Defining Zero Energy Buildings - A life cycle perspective
Author(s)
Date Issued
2008
Date Available
2012-09-03T13:35:56Z
Abstract
A simple definition of a zero energy building (ZEB) is a stand-alone building which does not use any offsite
energy source for its operation. The definition is easily extended to buildings with a net-zero annual
on-site energy balance, where a building is connected to the electricity grid and annual energy use is the
same as energy exported to the grid. In this paper we expand the ZEB definition adding a life cycle
perspective including the embodied energy (cradle to site) of materials, which is considered as an
additional off-site supply. The consideration of embodied energy adds a level that will help discern the life
cycle benefits of different demand or supply side building design strategies to achieve ZEBs.
Calculations of operational energy use and embodied energy for different house design options are
presented, analyzing what options would move closer to this ZEB definition. Results show how the
achievement of extreme reductions on energy demand by using high quantities of energy intensive
materials are not an optimum solution over the life cycle of a building, active technologies becoming a
better option after certain limits.
energy source for its operation. The definition is easily extended to buildings with a net-zero annual
on-site energy balance, where a building is connected to the electricity grid and annual energy use is the
same as energy exported to the grid. In this paper we expand the ZEB definition adding a life cycle
perspective including the embodied energy (cradle to site) of materials, which is considered as an
additional off-site supply. The consideration of embodied energy adds a level that will help discern the life
cycle benefits of different demand or supply side building design strategies to achieve ZEBs.
Calculations of operational energy use and embodied energy for different house design options are
presented, analyzing what options would move closer to this ZEB definition. Results show how the
achievement of extreme reductions on energy demand by using high quantities of energy intensive
materials are not an optimum solution over the life cycle of a building, active technologies becoming a
better option after certain limits.
Sponsorship
Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology
Type of Material
Conference Publication
Publisher
University College Dublin
Subject – LCSH
Buildings--Energy consumption
Buildings--Energy conservation
Life cycle costing
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Conference Details
PLEA 2008 – 25th Conference on Passive and Low Energy Architecture, Dublin, 22nd to 24th October 2008
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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PLEA_FinalPaper_ref_692 copy.pdf
Size
357.13 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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