Building energy index and students’ perceived performance in public university buildings

Sharifah Noor Nazim, S.Y. and Ati Rosemary, M.A. and Muhammad Azzam, I. (2014) Building energy index and students’ perceived performance in public university buildings. In: World Renewable Energy Congress 2014., August 2014, London, United Kingdom..

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Abstract

Numerous studies have shown that students’ learning experience is closely associated with the physical comfort level of their teaching and learning environment. The different strategies or allocation of air-conditioning, mechanical ventilation (ACMV) and lighting systems contribute greatly to the energy performances in the buildings. This study explores the relationship between electricity consumption of the academic buildings of a public university in an urban context and its students’ perceived performance. It seeks to find the answer patterns from unsuspected subjects; whether there is a difference between a lower energy-use building and a higher energy-use building. To achieve the objective, the study adopts the quantitative method of assessing students’ perceived performance through questionnaire survey. The questionnaires, adopted from Building Use Studies, UK, were distributed randomly through convenience sampling to students from two academic buildings in the campus. Both buildings were selected through purposive sampling method with specific inclusion and exclusion criteria. Subsequently, power and energy logger was installed into the same buildings to monitor electricity consumption at specific intervals. For comparison, building energy index (BEI) for each building was calculated. The study found that the building that scored higher in students’ performance, also has higher calculated BEI. As control for indoor comfort account for more than half of the total electricity consumption, the result suggested that electricity consumption influences students’ performance positively. The study also revealed that both buildings’ calculated BEI were lower than recommended by many standards. This suggests that these buildings have extremely high potential of achieving green building status. If executed properly, the university campus, which equates the size of a small city, may achieve green campus status sooner than expected and may lead others in the flagship project towards a lowcarbon university campus.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Funders: UNSPECIFIED
Uncontrolled Keywords: Building energy index (BEI), students’ performance, Academic buildings, public university.
Subjects: T Technology > T Technology (General)
T Technology > TH Building construction
Divisions: Faculty of the Built Environment
Depositing User: Mr. Mohd Safri
Date Deposited: 20 Jun 2016 00:58
Last Modified: 20 Jun 2016 00:58
URI: http://eprints.um.edu.my/id/eprint/15950

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