Loading…

Evaluating performance characteristics of electricity use of British historic buildings in Malaysia

Purpose - To present the findings of the investigation on the electricity use characteristics of British historic buildings in Malaysia, identifying where the design needs further modification as well as pin-pointing recurring problems within this building type.Design methodology approach - This res...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Facilities (Bradford, West Yorkshire, England) West Yorkshire, England), 2006-01, Vol.24 (3/4), p.141-152
Main Authors: Kamaruzzaman, S.N, Edwards, R.E
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Purpose - To present the findings of the investigation on the electricity use characteristics of British historic buildings in Malaysia, identifying where the design needs further modification as well as pin-pointing recurring problems within this building type.Design methodology approach - This research work was conducted on four British historical buildings by gathering electricity bills, original drawings documents, meeting with the staff and local authorities to collect as much information as possible on the building, such as occupancy pattern. Based on materials collected, a "normalised" calculated electricity consumption was established to allow comparison between buildings in different climatic regions or with different occupancy patterns.Findings - Comparing energy consumption against established benchmarks provides the first indication of how well the buildings are performing and opportunities for improvement. It was expected that this study would give a good indication of the electricity consumption characteristics of historic buildings in Malaysia.Research limitations implications - This work was done on historic buildings in Malaysia restricted to only British Colonial architectural buildings, which perhaps limits its application in the region. However, it may apply to other British architectural buildings elsewhere.Practical implications - This provide useful information for architects, engineers as well as building owners on the current state of energy consumption apart from creating energy savings awareness.Originality value - It is expected that this study would give an initial benchmark of the electricity consumption characteristics of historic buildings in Malaysia as well as British colonial buildings elsewhere.
ISSN:0263-2772
1758-7131
DOI:10.1108/02632770610649403