27 research outputs found
Assessing the requirements from ‘BB101’ 2006 and 2018 for a naturally ventilated preparatory school in the UK
In the UK, BB101 is the guidance document for ventilation design of school buildings. There are significant
changes proposed in the new version of BB101. The aim of this paper is to examine the requirements of
thermal comfort and CO2-based indoor air quality using both versions on a typical naturally ventilated
preparatory school design using dynamic thermal simulations. The findings indicate that the new set of
requirements on this school building design (both thermal and CO2 concentration) are much more
difficult to meet than the requirements from the old version. One of the new thermal comfort criteria
may be too difficult to achieve in practice, as the target value was exceeded for all the rooms of the
examined design, using both test reference year and design summer year weather data. The ventilation
provision for the school design is believed to be adequate. With appropriate ventilation control strategies,
the design is able to meet the revised CO2 concentration criteria. Further examinations of the criteria
from the new guidance document are needed to make sure the chosen criteria are fit for purpose. The
use of future projected design summer year weather data (2020) also adds extra challenges for the
preparatory school building to meet the newly proposed adaptive thermal comfort criteria.
Practical applications: The research presents a very first assessment of a preparatory school building
design using the newly proposed BB101 guidance document. It will assist further exploration on the
appropriateness of the new assessment criteria and the use of design summer year weather data in order
to explore the implications of the new BB101 guidelines for designers. The method adopted in the
research can also be used for other building types to assess overheating in buildings when adaptive
comfort criteria are recommended
Not Available
Not AvailableA study was conducted to examine the interrelationships among socioeconomic factors, household consumption patterns, calorie intake and greenhouse gas emissions factors in rural eastern India based on household survey data. Findings indicated that higher monthly per capita incomes (12.1–80.1$) were associated with greater average calorie intakes (2021–2525 kcal d−1). As estimated by the FEEDME model, in total 17.2% of the population was calorie malnourished with a regional disparity of 29.4–18.2% malnourishment. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions were calculated only on the basis of crop and livestock production and consumption. Rice accounted for the highest share of total GHG emissions, on average 82.6% on a production basis, which varied from 58.1% to 94.9% in regional basis. Rice contributed the greatest share (~ 65% and 66.2%) in terms of both calories and GHG emissions (CO2 eq y−1), respectively, on a consumption basis. We conclude that extensive rice farming and increasing animal product consumption are dominant factors in the higher carbon footprint in this region and are likely to further increase with increase in per capita income. This study provides useful information to help for better crop planning and for fine-tuning food access policy, to reduce carbon footprint and calorie malnutrition.Not AvailableMinistry of earth sciences, Govt. of Indi
