1 / 13

SBA Unit 8B: Building Commissioning

SBA Unit 8B: Building Commissioning. Prepared By: David J Ellner, PE. COMMISSIONING 101. Definition History of Commissioning Why Commission? Types of Commissioning LEED Commissioning Economics of Commissioning Other Cost / Benefit Factors. DEFINITION.

nika
Télécharger la présentation

SBA Unit 8B: Building Commissioning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SBA Unit 8B:Building Commissioning Prepared By: David J Ellner, PE

  2. COMMISSIONING 101 • Definition • History of Commissioning • Why Commission? • Types of Commissioning • LEED Commissioning • Economics of Commissioning • Other Cost / Benefit Factors

  3. DEFINITION Commissioning (Cx): Broad Definition • A phased, quality assurance process, starting at design, extending through construction and continuing during the lifetime of the building. • The Cx process is intended to assure appropriate and cost effective architectural and technology systems are properly selected, engineered, constructed and perform optimally upon Ownership acceptance and for the lifetime of the facility.

  4. WHY COMMISSION? • Created to achieve what would otherwise be viewed as best practices. • Fills performance gap among traditional Owner, A/E, Contractor roles. • Maintains focus on meeting design intent in an increasingly complex, regulated and litigious environment. • Reduce long term risks associated with environmental and safety issues

  5. HISTORY OF COMMISSIONING • Cx introduced approximately 20+ years ago. • Originally sponsored by Utilities / CEC’s ++ as a strategy to verify performance targets for energy efficiency projects funded by Utilities are met. • Rigorous guidelines developed by PECI, ASHRAE, AABC and others. • Introduced into new construction projects on limited basis, with emphasis on guidelines. • Used more broadly on new construction with LEED accreditation as added motivator. • Is currently in transition as industry absorbs its practice.

  6. TYPES OF COMMISSIONING • New Construction and LEED Cx • Energy Efficiency Measure Cx • Post Construction Cx: • Continuous Cx • Retro Cx • Monitoring Based Cx

  7. LEED COMMISSIONING • EA Prerequisite 1: Fundamental Cx • EA Credit 3: Enhanced Cx • Commissioned Systems (Required) • HVAC + Controls • Lighting + Daylighting Controls • Renewable Energy Systems • Read the LEED Manual For Details

  8. SCOPE AND RESPONSIBILITY SUMMARY

  9. ECONOMICS OF COMMISSIONING Average Cx Cost Estimate Table: Based on CSU Commissioning Rate Schedule 6/07

  10. ECONOMICS OF COMMISSIONING • Factors impacting cost • Project size and complexity • Strength of design and construction teams • Cx entry point – early in design vs. late in construction • Cx scope options – Fundamental Cx + Enhanced Cx + QC + Peer Review ++ • Commitment of Ownership

  11. ECONOMICS OF COMMISSIONING • Benefits: • Required for LEED accreditation • Improves coordination from design, through construction and occupancy. Reduces E&O + change orders • Facilitates achieving design intent and results in efficiently operating equipment and systems • Jump starts a meaningful O&M program • Improved IAQ, occupant comfort and productivity • Reduced O&M costs / higher reliability

  12. OTHER COST / BENEFIT FACTORS • Constructibility reviews • Integration of Cx Specs with other related sections. Avoid duplication and conflicts. Work with contractors not against. • Combine Cx with QA/QC • The scoping meeting / Definition of roles • The role of controls • Ownership support **

  13. TECHNOLOGY AND MIXED USE APPLICATIONS • Mixed use = Retail + Residential + Commercial • Discussion Points: • Delivered versus on-site generated utilities. • “Smart” distribution strategies. • Utility vs. Sub-metering. Cost vs. benefit • Central Systems vs. de-central systems. • Controls and Security • Questions

More Related