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Building Research Establishment

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Building Science is the science and technology-driven collection of knowledge to provide better indoor environmental quality (IEQ), energy-efficient built environments , and occupant comfort and satisfaction . Building physics, architectural science , and applied physics are terms used for the knowledge domain that overlaps with building science. In building science, the methods used in natural and hard sciences are widely applied, which may include controlled and quasi-experiments , randomized control, physical measurements, remote sensing, and simulations . On the other hand, methods from social and soft sciences , such as case study , interviews & focus group , observational method , surveys , and experience sampling , are also widely used in building science to understand occupant satisfaction, comfort, and experiences by acquiring qualitative data. One of the recent trends in building science is a combination of the two different methods. For instance, it is widely known that occupants' thermal sensation and comfort may vary depending on their sex, age, emotion, experiences, etc. even in the same indoor environment. Despite the advancement in data extraction and collection technology in building science, objective measurements alone can hardly represent occupants' state of mind such as comfort and preference. Therefore, researchers are trying to measure both physical contexts and understand human responses to figure out complex interrelationships.

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50-767: The Building Research Establishment (BRE) is a centre of building science in the United Kingdom, owned by charitable organisation the BRE Trust. It is a former UK government national laboratory that was privatised in 1997. BRE provides research, advice, training, testing, certification and standards for both public and private sector organisations in the UK and abroad. It has its headquarters in Garston, Hertfordshire , England, with regional sites in Glasgow , Swansea ,

100-860: A building's embodied carbon footprint. Strategies to mitigate these impacts include material substitution, incorporating recycled and reused materials, and adopting low-carbon manufacturing processes. Challenges in addressing embodied carbon include insufficient data, lack of standardization, cost considerations, and regulatory barriers. Reliable databases are often limited, region-specific, and inconsistent, making it difficult to apply universally. Existing standards are often voluntary and vary in scope, making comparisons and benchmarking difficult. Life cycle assessment standards for evaluating building embodied carbon include ISO 14040, ISO 14044, EN 15978, PAS 2050, and ReCiPe. These frameworks provide structured approaches to evaluate and quantify life cycle environmental impacts, such as embodied carbon. Addressing embodied carbon

150-566: A concert hall or music recital space. To illustrate this concept consider the difference between a modern large office meeting room or lecture theater and a traditional classroom with all hard surfaces. Interior building surfaces can be constructed of many different materials and finishes. Ideal acoustical panels are those without a face or finish material that interferes with the acoustical infill or substrate. Fabric covered panels are one way to heighten acoustical absorption. Perforated metal also shows sound absorbing qualities. Finish material

200-586: A means of providing comfort. Building science includes the analysis of HVAC systems for both physical impacts (heat distribution, air velocities, relative humidities, etc.) and for effect on the comfort of the building's occupants. Because occupants' perceived comfort is dependent on factors such as current weather and the type of climate the building is located in, the needs for HVAC systems to provide comfortable conditions will vary across projects. In addition, various HVAC control strategies have been implemented and studied to better contribute to occupants' comfort. In

250-627: A natural look to the interior space, although acoustical absorption may not be great. There are four ways to improve workplace acoustics and solve workplace sound problems – the ABCDs. Building services noise control is the science of controlling noise produced by: Inadequate control may lead to elevated sound levels within the space which can be annoying and reduce speech intelligibility. Typical improvements are vibration isolation of mechanical equipment, and sound attenuators in ductwork. Sound masking can also be created by adjusting HVAC noise to

300-623: A research and education programme on fire safety engineering. The other centres are in Strathclyde (energy utilisation), Bath (construction materials), Cardiff ( sustainable engineering ), and Brasilia (integrated and sustainable communities). BRE was founded in 1921 as the Building Research Board at East Acton as part of the British Civil Service , as an effort to improve the quality of housing in

350-409: A room's surfaces based on sound absorbing and reflecting properties. Excessive reverberation time , which can be calculated, can lead to poor speech intelligibility. Sound reflections create standing waves that produce natural resonances that can be heard as a pleasant sensation or an annoying one. Reflective surfaces can be angled and coordinated to provide good coverage of sound for a listener in

400-551: A sub-set of the broader Building Services, used to control the temperature, humidity, pressure and other select aspects of the indoor environment are often described as the Heating, Ventilating, and Air-Conditioning (HVAC) systems. These systems have grown in complexity and importance (often consuming around 20% of the total budget in commercial buildings) as occupants demand tighter control of conditions, buildings become larger, and enclosures and passive measures became less important as

450-530: A theatre, restaurant or railway station, enhancing the quality of music in a concert hall or recording studio, or suppressing noise to make offices and homes more productive and pleasant places to work and live in. Architectural acoustic design is usually done by acoustic consultants. This science analyzes noise transmission from building exterior envelope to interior and vice versa. The main noise paths are roofs , eaves , walls , windows , door and penetrations. Sufficient control ensures space functionality and

500-423: A variety of contaminants (in the form of gases and particles) from office machines, cleaning products, construction activities, carpets and furnishings, perfumes, cigarette smoke, water-damaged building materials, microbial growth (fungal, mold, and bacterial), insects, and outdoor pollutants. Other factors such as indoor temperatures, relative humidity, and ventilation levels can also affect how individuals respond to

550-450: Is a growing aspect of building science, becoming critical for advancing building sustainability efforts and reducing the environmental impact of the built environment. POE is a survey-based method to measure the building performance after the built environment was occupied. The occupant responses were collected through structured or open inquiries. Statistical methods and data visualization were often used to suggest which aspects(features) of

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600-530: Is critical that architects, engineers, and building owners use daylight and glare metrics to evaluate lighting conditions in daylit spaces for occupant health and comfort. Indoor environmental quality (IEQ) refers to the quality of a building's environment in relation to the health and wellbeing of those who occupy space within it. IEQ is determined by many factors, including lighting, air quality, and temperature. Workers are often concerned that they have symptoms or health conditions from exposures to contaminants in

650-631: Is critical to mitigate climate change. To address these emissions, renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind energy, are adopted by the building industry to support electricity generation. However, the electricity demand profile shows imbalance between supply and demand, which is known as the ' duck curve '. This could impact on maintaining grid system stability. Therefore, other strategies such as thermal energy storage systems are developed to achieve higher levels of sustainability by reducing grid peak power. A push towards zero-energy building also known as Net-Zero Energy Building has been present in

700-620: Is often required based on building use and local municipal codes. An example would be providing a suitable design for a home which is to be constructed close to a high volume roadway, or under the flight path of a major airport, or of the airport itself. The science of limiting and/or controlling noise transmission from one building space to another to ensure space functionality and speech privacy. The typical sound paths are ceilings, room partitions, acoustic ceiling panels (such as wood dropped ceiling panels), doors , windows , flanking, ducting and other penetrations. Technical solutions depend on

750-465: Is the emissions from energy use during a building's life, and embodied carbon , which accounts for the emissions from material production and construction. Building sustainability practices aim to design with consideration for future resources and environmental realities. Buildings are responsible for approximately 40% of global energy consumption and 13% carbon emissions, primarily related to building HVAC systems operation. Reducing operational carbon

800-567: Is the science and engineering of achieving a good sound within a building and is a branch of acoustical engineering . The first application of modern scientific methods to architectural acoustics was carried out by the American physicist Wallace Sabine in the Fogg Museum lecture room. He applied his newfound knowledge to the design of Symphony Hall, Boston . Architectural acoustics can be about achieving good speech intelligibility in

850-406: Is to make the crowd as loud as possible and inter-space noise control becomes a factor but in helping reflect noise to create more reverberation and louder decibel level throughout the stadium. Many outdoor soccer stadiums for example have roofs over the fan sections which create more reverberation and echoing which helps raise the general volume in the stadium. This is the science of controlling

900-453: Is typically a specialization within the broad areas of architecture or engineering practice. However, there are professional organizations offering individual professional credentials in specialized areas. Some of the most prominent green building rating systems are: There are other building sustainability accreditation and certification institutions as well. Also in the US, contractors certified by

950-399: Is used to cover over the acoustical substrate. Mineral fiber board, or Micore , is a commonly used acoustical substrate. Finish materials often consist of fabric, wood or acoustical tile. Fabric can be wrapped around substrates to create what is referred to as a "pre-fabricated panel" and often provides good noise absorption if laid onto a wall. Prefabricated panels are limited to the size of

1000-751: The UK Green Building Council (UKGBC) in 2007. Having subsumed a number of other government organisations over the years, including the former Fire Research Station, and the Princes Risborough Laboratory, it was given executive agency status in 1990, before being privatised by the Department of the Environment on 19 March 1997. From 1 January 2013, BRE took over the management of the UK and Ireland chapter of BuildingSMART . In 2017, this responsibility

1050-522: The building envelope and electrical and mechanical systems . The National Institute of Building Sciences (NIBS) additionally includes the areas of building information modeling , building commissioning , fire protection engineering , seismic design and resilient design within its scope. One of the applications of building science is to provide predictive capability to optimize the building performance and sustainability of new and existing buildings, understand or prevent building failures, and guide

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1100-805: The Building Performance Institute, an independent organization, advertise that they operate businesses as Building Scientists. This is questionable due to their lack of scientific background and credentials. On the other hand, more formal building science experience is true in Canada for most of the Certified Energy Advisors. Many of these trades and technologists require and receive some training in very specific areas of building science (e.g., air tightness, or thermal insulation). Architectural acoustics Architectural acoustics (also known as building acoustics )

1150-637: The Building Science field. The qualifications for Net Zero Energy Building Certification can be found on the Living Building Challenge website. Embodied carbon refers to the total carbon emissions associated with the entire life cycle of a building material (i.e. material extraction, manufacturing and production, transportation, construction, and end of life). As building performance research has decreased operational carbon, there has been an increase in embodied carbon within

1200-849: The Performance Measurement Protocols for Commercial Buildings. For example, thermal infrared (IR) imaging devices can be used to measure temperatures of building components while the building is in use. These measurements can be used to evaluate how the mechanical system is operating and if there are areas of anomalous heat gain or heat loss through the building envelope. Measurements of conditions in existing buildings are used as part of post occupancy evaluations . Post occupancy evaluations may also include surveys of building occupants to gather data on occupant satisfaction and well-being and to gather qualitative data on building performance that may not have been captured by measurement devices. Many aspects of building science are

1250-546: The Trust's goal of promoting safety and sustainability . Over the last 20 years the BRE Trust has funded 117 PhDs on a total research programme of £15m, with other funding levered into the sector as a whole from research councils and European Union research sources. The BRE Trust also financially supports five university Centres of Excellence. One of the first Centres established was at the University of Edinburgh in 2004,

1300-538: The U.S., ASHRAE has published standards to help building managers and engineers design and operate the system. In the UK, a similar guideline was published by CIBSE . Apart from industry practice, advanced control strategies are widely discussed in research as well. For example, closed-loop feedback control can compare air temperature set-point with sensor measurements; demand response control can help prevent electric power-grid from having peak load by reducing or shifting their usage based on time-varying rate. With

1350-597: The US, India, the Middle East and China. BRE is funded with income from commissioned research, commercial programmes and by a number of digital tools for use in the construction sector. The Building Research Establishment is owned by the BRE Trust , a registered charity that works to support research and education in the built environment. All of the profits accrued by BRE are passed to the Trust and are used to fund new research and education programmes designed to meet

1400-796: The United Kingdom . During the Second World War , it was involved in the confidential research and development of the bouncing bomb for use against the Möhne Dam in the Dambusters Raid of 1943 A small scale model of the dam used for testing can still be found at the Centre in Garston, Watford, today. BRE was a founding member in 1976 of BSRIA , the Building Services Research and Information Association and

1450-526: The building environment is causing a specific health condition, the information available from medical tests and tests of the environment is not sufficient to establish which contaminants are responsible. Despite uncertainty about what to measure and how to interpret what is measured, research shows that building-related symptoms are associated with building characteristics, including dampness, cleanliness, and ventilation characteristics. Indoor environments are highly complex and building occupants may be exposed to

1500-547: The building sector, partly due to the higher material demands of energy-efficient designs. This shift has underscored the need to address embodied carbon alongside operational emissions to achieve holistic decarbonization. Building decarbonization is most impactful during early-stage design, where materials, systems, and structural choices can be optimized to reduce embodied carbon and improve operational efficiency before moving forward in development stages. Structural materials, such as steel and concrete, contribute significantly to

1550-420: The building were supportive or problematic to the occupants. The results may become design knowledge for architects to design new buildings or provide a data-basis to improve the current environment. Although there are no direct or integrated professional architecture or engineering certifications for building science, there are independent professional credentials associated with the disciplines. Building science

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1600-418: The buildings where they work. One reason for this concern is that their symptoms often get better when they are not in the building. While research has shown that some respiratory symptoms and illnesses can be associated with damp buildings, it is still unclear what measurements of indoor contaminants show that workers are at risk for disease. In most instances where a worker and his or her physician suspect that

1650-620: The design of new techniques and technologies. During the architectural design process, building science knowledge is used to inform design decisions to optimize building performance. Design decisions can be made based on knowledge of building science principles and established guidelines, such as the NIBS Whole Building Design Guide (WBDG) and the collection of ASHRAE Standards related to building science. Computational tools can be used during design to simulate building performance based on input information about

1700-497: The designed building envelope , lighting system , and mechanical system . Models can be used to predict operational energy use, solar heat and radiation distribution, air flow , and other physical phenomena within the building. These tools are valuable for evaluating a design and ensuring it will perform within an acceptable range before construction begins. Many of the available computational tools analyze building performance goals and perform design optimization . The accuracy of

1750-517: The enclosure must control (not necessarily block or stop) the flow of moisture, heat, air, vapor, solar radiation, insects, or noise, while resisting the loads imposed on the structure (wind, seismic). Daylight transmittance through glazed components of the facade can be analyzed to evaluate the reduced need for electric lighting. Building sustainability, often referred to as sustainable design , integrates strategies to lower building environmental impacts, including lowering both operational carbon, which

1800-510: The improvement from computational performance and machine learning algorithms, model prediction on cooling and heating load with optimal control can further improve occupants comfort by pre-operating the HVAC system. It is recognized that advanced control strategies implementation is under the scope of developing Building Automation System (BMS) with integrated smart communication technologies, such as Internet of Things (IoT). However, one of

1850-613: The indoor environment. Understanding the sources of indoor environmental contaminants and controlling them can often help prevent or resolve building-related worker symptoms. Practical guidance for improving and maintaining the indoor environment is available. Building indoor environment covers the environmental aspects in the design, analysis, and operation of energy-efficient, healthy, and comfortable buildings. Fields of specialization include architecture, HVAC design, thermal comfort , indoor air quality (IAQ), lighting , acoustics , and control systems . The mechanical systems, usually

1900-427: The interior designer will inevitably generate a few building science issues. Daylighting is the controlled admission of natural light, direct sunlight, and diffused skylight into a building to reduce electric lighting and save energy. A daylighting system comprises of not just daylight apertures, such as skylights and windows, but is coupled with a daylight-responsive lighting control system. Daylight positively impacts

1950-530: The major obstacles identified by practitioners is the scalability of control logics and building data mapping due to the unique nature of building designs. It was estimated that due to inadequate interoperability, building industry loses $ 15.8 billion annually in the U.S. Recent research projects like Haystack and Brick intend to address the problem by utilizing metadata schema , which could provide more accurate and convenient ways of capturing data points and connection hierarchies in building mechanical systems. With

2000-516: The models is influenced by the modeler's knowledge of building science principles and by the amount of validation performed for the specific program. When existing buildings are being evaluated, measurements and computational tools can be used to evaluate performance based on measured existing conditions. An array of in-field testing equipment can be used to measure temperature, moisture, sound levels, air pollutants, or other criteria. Standardized procedures for taking these measurements are provided in

2050-423: The occupants experience visual discomfort from excessive sunlight penetration through the windows of the buildings, they may wish to close the shading devices which would decrease the daylight availability and increase the electric lighting energy consumption. Daylighting and visual comfort is an extensively studied topic in building science that allows for successful harvesting of daylighting and energy savings. It

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2100-414: The psychological and physiological health of a human being by stimulating the human circadian rhythm, which can lower depression, improve sleep quality, reduce lethargy, and prevent illness. However, studies do not always lead to a positive correlation between maximizing daylighting availability and human comfort and health. When large windows exist within the buildings, we need to control the quantity and

2150-617: The quality of the visual environment. A lack of attention to visual comfort issues often makes the best daylighting intentions ineffective due to excessive brightness and high contrast luminance ratios within the space which result in glare. Illuminating Engineering Society (IES)’s Lighting Handbook defines glare as the sensation produced by luminance levels in the visual field, sufficiently greater than those that our eyes can adapt to, that causes discomfort or loss in visual performance or visibility. Glare interferes with visual perception caused by an uncomfortably bright light source or reflection. If

2200-474: The responsibility of the architect (in Canada, many architectural firms employ an architectural technologist for this purpose), often in collaboration with the engineering disciplines that have evolved to handle 'non-building envelope' building science concerns: Civil engineering , Structural engineering , Earthquake engineering , Geotechnical engineering , Mechanical engineering, Electrical engineering, Acoustic engineering , & fire code engineering. Even

2250-504: The source of the noise and the path of acoustic transmission , for example noise by steps or noise by (air, water) flow vibrations. An example would be providing suitable party wall design in an apartment complex to minimize the mutual disturbance due to noise by residents in adjacent apartments. Inter-space noise control can take a different form when talking about Acoustics in European football stadiums. One goal in stadium acoustics

2300-697: The substrate ranging from 2 by 4 feet (0.61 m × 1.22 m) to 4 by 10 feet (1.2 m × 3.0 m). Fabric retained in a wall-mounted perimeter track system, is referred to as "on-site acoustical wall panels". This is constructed by framing the perimeter track into shape, infilling the acoustical substrate and then stretching and tucking the fabric into the perimeter frame system. On-site wall panels can be constructed to accommodate door frames, baseboard, or any other intrusion. Large panels (generally, greater than 50 square feet (4.6 m )) can be created on walls and ceilings with this method. Wood finishes can consist of punched or routed slots and provide

2350-600: The support of semantic models, automated configuration can further benefit HVAC control commissioning and software upgrades. The building enclosure is the part of the building that separates the indoors from the outdoors. This includes the wall, roof, windows, slabs on grade, and joints between all of these. The comfort, productivity, and even health of building occupants in areas near the building enclosure (i.e., perimeter zones) are affected by outdoor influences such as noise, temperature, and solar radiation, and by their ability to control these influences. As part of its function,

2400-575: Was critical of BRE suggesting its once recognised international status as a leader in fire safety had been compromised, talking of a "desire to put BRE's status in the industry and commercial position ahead of considerations of public safety." Members of the House of Lords called for BRE to be stripped of its responsibility to certify modern methods of construction , following the Grenfell Inquiry criticism. BRE defended its role, rejected claims it

2450-617: Was not impartial and insisting its testing approach was robust. 51°42′00″N 0°22′25″W  /  51.7001°N 0.3737°W  / 51.7001; -0.3737  ( BRE ) Building science Building science traditionally includes the study of indoor thermal environment, indoor acoustic environment , indoor light environment , indoor air quality , and building resource use, including energy and building material use. These areas are studied in terms of physical principles, relationship to building occupant health, comfort , and productivity, and how they can be controlled by

2500-795: Was passed to the UK BIM Alliance (now known as Nima). In August 2016, Constructing Excellence merged with BRE, with BRE undertaking to maintain the CE's brands and functions. Since the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017, BRE has been criticised for holding poor fire safety standards, all the while via reviewing cases like that of Grenfell. The final (phase 2) report of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry , published in September 2024,

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