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Glass
Facades Go Beyond Skin Deep - Designers Stress the Importance of Integrating
with Building Systems
Product
developers, building owners and designers are taking a new look at high-performance
glass facades as key in creating buildings with improved access to daylight,
better indoor air quality and improved energy efficiency. But a facade
that helps improve a building's interior environment and limits its loss
of energy is not enough, say some sources. A building's skin should be
a power generator rather than an energy liability.
'Although glass curtain walls are becoming more and more thermally efficient,'
says Gregory Kiss, a founder of Kiss + Cathcart Architects, Brooklyn,
the goal of creating an energy-conserving facade is one of 'diminishing
returns.' His firm has designed a hypothetical 150-story tower to be built
in New York City in 2020 with a skin that would be a source of power.
The structure, clad entirely in photovoltaic (PV) panels, would generate
60% of the building's electricity requirements. Wind turbines enclosed
in PV louvers would supply the rest.
Although the 2020 tower may seem more like a fantastic vision, Kiss maintains
that photovoltaic technology 'is ready for prime time.' Even now, the
least expensive building-integrated panels cost about $12 per sq ft. 'There
are many more expensive cladding materials,' he says. And despite the
fact that many recent high-profile projects use PVs to generate only a
small portion of their total power requirements, building-integrated photovoltaics
could be common-place in three to five years, he predicts. 'The number-one
limitation is education,' Kiss says.
Scientists and manufacturers are also looking beyond photovoltaics to
the next generation of variable materials. These so-called 'smart' glazings
dynamically respond to exterior conditions to control daylighting and
solar heat gain. The most promising of such switchable technologies for
use in buildings is electrochromic glazing, which undergoes a reversible
change in optical properties when exposed to light, according to Stephen
Selkowitz, head of the building technologies department at the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California. The lab is currently
using room mock-ups to discover how best to optimise lighting levels under
various conditions.
But an energy-efficient building envelope isn't just about the materials.
'Limiting solar and thermal transfer requires integrating the facade system
with the lighting, mechanical, heating and cooling systems,' says facade
engineer Maurya McClintock, an Arup associate principal in San Francisco.
'If designers look solely to curtain walls as a solution for comfort and
energy consumption, they will never achieve the synergy that is possible
with integrated design,' says Stephen Lee, a professor at the Centre for
Building Performance and Diagnostics at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh.
LAGTIME
The US lags Europe in the development of advanced building systems and
high-performance facades, due in part to lower energy costs. Curtain wall
technology in the U.S. 'is about 10 to 15 years behind,' says Alistair
Lazenby, technical director of curtain wall contractor Schmidlin A.G.,
Aesch, Switzerland.
Recent legislation, aimed at cutting greenhouse gas emissions in line
with commitments to the Kyoto Accord, will likely increase scrutiny of
building envelope performance in Europe, says Cameron Johnstone, a lecturer
at the Energy Systems Research Unit at Scotland's Strathclyde University.
The directive, enacted last month, applies to renovations and new construction
and requires governments to introduce standardised methods for calculating
building energy use by 2006. With buildings said to account for a third
of energy use by European Union countries, immediate and full implementation
of the legislation would allow the EU to achieve, within 10 years, its
full Kyoto goal of cutting emissions by 8% below 1990 levels, according
to some estimates.
Double-skin facades are a popular approach to all-glass building envelopes
in Europe, especially in Germany, where regulations mandate that office
workers have access to daylight and fresh air, according to John Durbrow,
senior vice president of architect Murphy/Jahn. The Chicago-based firm
designed a 40-story, double-skin he adquarters building for Deutsche Post
in Bonn that was occupied in late December.
The building's envelope consists of an outer layer of laminated glass
and an interior layer of double-glazed glass with operable windows, separated
by a 1.7-meter gap. Blinds between the two layers, controlled by a building
management system, provide protection from solar gain. During the cooling
season, warm air is drawn into the gap and purged through outlets located
every nine stories. Cooler air on the inside of the blinds is drawn into
the office space through fan-coil boxes that further lower the air temperature.
Radiant cooling in the floor slab helps lower the room temperature more
before the air is exhausted into an atrium space. During the heating season,
the system acts as a buffer, tempering the outdoor air before it is drawn
into the offices.
Deutsche Post's double-skin system, along with its integrated approach
to heating and cooling, could cut energy use by 50% compared to a building
with a single facade and central air conditioning, says Matthias Schuler,
principal of Transsolar Energietechnik GmbH, the project's Stuttgart-based
climate consultant.
Despite the expected effectiveness of this deep double-skin system, it
soon could be replaced by one that is less real estate and capital intensive.
Murphy/Jahn plans to use a double-skin system that is only 26 cm deep
for a speculative 200-m-tall office tower in Frankfurt set to begin construction
in 2005. The goal is to achieve 'the same efficiency in a thinner package,'
says Durbrow
.
There are signs that such systems have a future in the US, even though
low energy costs seem to provide little incentive for owners. In Philadelphia,
contractors are nearing completion of a $16.5-million building for the
University of Pennsylvania's School of Engineering and Applied Science
that is clad with a double-skin system that has a 4-in.-wide cavity between
an external double-glazed unit and an interior single-glazed unit.
The architects chose the system in order to maximise the penetration of
natural light into the 48,000-sq-ft, six-story building located on a tight
site surrounded by several existing structures, while maintaining the
thermal comfort of the users. 'The university didn't want to fry the occupants
in the summer or freeze them in the winter,' says Richard Maimon, an associate
at KieranTimberlake Associates LLP, Philadelphia.
The unitised wall is tied to the building's mechanical system and helps
maintain comfort by using the cavity between the inner and outer glazing
as a plenum through which return room air is circulated. This keeps the
building's perimeter warm in the winter and cool in the summer. The cavity
also houses adjustable blinds that keep out solar radiation.
Permasteelisa SpA, Treviso, Italy, the manufacturer and installer of the
panels used at the University of Pennsylvania, sees an expanding market
in the U.S. The company will start installing a similar panel system later
this month at a Skidmore Owings & Merrill-designed 14-story office
building in Boston that will serve as the U.S. headquarters for Toronto-based
Manulife Financial, says Roberto Bicchiarelli, executive vice president
of Permasteelisa Cladding Technologies, Windsor, Conn. Permasteelisa does
not expect much demand for this product from developers or speculative
builders since it costs about 20% more than a high-quality standard curtain
wall system. 'The wall system has a medium- to long-term payback,' says
Bicchiarelli. which works for owners who occupy buildings for many years.
ELABORATE
SCREEN Mockups of the New York Times building's ceramic rod 'veil' informed
the curtain wall bid documents. (Photo courtesy of Benson)
LEEDING THE WAY
One factor nurturing this embryonic interest in high-performance facades
is the Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design rating system,
known as LEED. The performance-based system, devised by the U.S. Green
Buildings Council, Washington, D.C., is designed to evaluate the environmental
impact of commercial and institutional buildings and provide a standard
for what constitutes a sustainable building.
Seattle is one of several municipal and federal owners that require some
level of LEED certification. Because of this mandate, convincing city
officials to sacrifice the space required for a 30-in.-deep, 12-story,
double-skin facade at the recently completed $70-million Seattle Justice
Center was not difficult, according to designers. Although it cost roughly
$320,000 more than a traditional facade, 'it was an easy sell because
the city was motivated by LEED,' says Seattle-based Rick Zieve, design
principal at architecture firm NBBJ. The cavity, which is independent
of the building's mechanical system, helps maintain comfortable perimeter
temperatures by trapping solar heat and expelling it through louvers at
the top of the wall.
Little post-construction data is available to demonstrate how well double-skin
facades work in conserving energy.
Anecdotal evidence suggests they work well. In 1999, Telus, a Canadian
telecommunications firm, wrapped an existing concrete framed building
in downtown Vancouver, B.C., in a new double-glazed facade as part of
a $13-million renovation designed by local architecture firm Busby &
Associates. The 42-in. gap between the new 'jacket' and the existing building
acts as a thermal buffer in much the same way as the double-skin facade
at the Seattle Justice Center. On one recent 15°F day, air was evacuated
from the top of the cavity at 85°F. 'We were throwing energy away
because we were creating too much,' says Doug Green, special projects
manager for Telus.
Sources stress the importance of having the curtain wall contractor's
input early in a building project. 'The supplier will have a good handle
on the manufacturing process as well as an understanding of what can and
cannot be achieved,' says Arup's McClintock. Although she cautions that
the contractor should not be considered a substitute for a facade engineer
who can provide an impartial view of components and systems.
As the complexity of wall systems escalates, unusual procurement methods
intended to help the owner obtain engineering feedback from the curtain
wall contractor are becoming more common. For challenging projects, award
of the curtain wall contract before hiring the general contractor is not
unheard of, says Lou Niles, president of Benson, a Portland, Ore.-based
curtain wall contractor.
Benson is competing for the 51-story New York Times building. Its skin
will include a screen of horizontal ceramic rods that will start at the
second floor and extend beyond the top floor. This 'veil' is intended
to reflect atmospheric conditions but will also act as a shading device,
says Dan Kaplan, principal of Fox & Fowle Architects, New York.
This past summer, the New York Times project team gave four curtain wall
contractors a stipend of $50,000 each to build a mockup of the facade.
The mockup process allowed designers to incorporate the contractors' knowledge
into the bid documents. 'It gave us the benefit of a lot of different
thinking and made us feel more certain about the budget,' says Bob Sanna,
executive vice president of Forest City Ratner Cos., the project's developer,
along with the New York Times Co. The project team is now evaluating bids
and expects to award the contract in March, in advance of selecting the
construction manager, says Sanna.
The growing complexity of curtain walls is revealing the limitations of
modelling tools used to optimise design and demonstrate code compliance.
'It took us one month to show compliance with the energy code,' says Gary
Pomerantz, senior vice president, Flack & Kurtz, New York City. The
firm is mechanical engineer for the New York Times project. 'The three-dimensional
skin [with its] moving and overlapping shadows made modeling difficult,'
he says.
Existing tools work well for modelling complex but conventional curtain
walls, says Lawrence Berkeley's Selkowitz. In other words, curtain walls
with many layers of glass and several coatings, use laminates or gas fills.
But the tools do not reliably predict the performance of dynamic materials
such as those that transmit or reflect light in a non-linear manner or
systems that have between-pane air cavities. 'When you introduce a prismatic
daylight control layer or an automated venetian blind with a special reflective
surface or a double facade with a complex air flow pattern, these systems
are more difficult to model,' says Selkowitz. His lab, which has developed
much of the software that is in the public domain, is working to add these
capabilities.
Stricter US building codes could push more high-performance facades. In
1999, the Building Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential
Buildings, known as ASHRAE 90.1, was overhauled for the first time in
a decade. It was revised again in 2001. So far, 13 states have adopted
energy standards equal to or stricter than the 1999 version, says Joseph
Derringer, chair of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and
Air-Conditioning Engineers Inc.'s building envelope subcommittee.
For envelope performance, the main difference between the most recent
standards and the 1989 version is more rigorous code language, says Derringer.
Although some observers believe that adopting the latest versions of 90.1
will discourage construction of glass buildings, he says the tougher standard
'should instead mean more buildings with advanced glass systems.'
By Joann Gonchar, with Peter Reina
http://enr.construction.com/features/buildings/archives/030210.asp
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