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By Barbara Knecht and Sara Hart
Since RWE, an energy company, purports
to promote an image of responsible energy usage, its participation
in the experimentation with natural ventilation in this project
has paid off, literally and figuratively. It saved 30 to 35
percent in energy use over an equivalent conventional building
with a double-glazed, single-skin facade. According to McLaughlin,
who met with the owner not long ago, The building has
performed very well for them. For us, it is an opportunity
to see the excellent results when the architect creates a
superior design and the owner is prepared to do something
a little different.
CYTS Plaza, now under construction in
Beijing, demonstrates that 10 years later, the concept of
using a double facade for naturally ventilated buildings is
still the standard. Designed by Hamburg-based architects von
Gerkan, Marg and Partners and Arup Hong Kong, this 22-story,
246-foot tower will be the headquarters of a tour-and-travel-services
company.
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greenhouse units are modular, steel-framed
trussed structures. Water is provided by low-volume,
low-pressure drip and mist systems. |
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At CYTS, there is a vertical band of
louvers in the exterior facade covered by a side-hinged panel
on the interior facade, which individual users can open and
close for fresh air. The building has a decentralized forced-air
mechanical system, as well. Each floor is divided into halves,
with a special ventilation room along the facade that takes
in outside air, conditions it, and distributes it by a ceiling
fan throughout each half-zone and into the 15-inch air cavity.
Typically, the zone adjacent to the exterior of a building
suffers from the most extreme temperature fluctuations. Air
circulation next to the outer skin can reduce solar gain in
the summer and act as a thermal blanket in the winter.
During the spring and fall in Beijing,
it is not unusual for owners to turn off the cooling systems
in office buildings. During this time, the ambient temperature
depends solely on the circulation of outside air from the
intake rooms, and air brought in through the operable panels.
At times of the year when the mechanical system is operating,
users are still able to open and close the panels, and the
system will continue operating. Two large enclosed atria increase
the access to natural daylight and the effectiveness of the
natural ventilation system to reach all the users. The openings
provide a natural smoke extraction system, as well, required
by Chinese code under certain circumstances.
If people prefer it and there are successful
models to draw on, why are naturally ventilated office towers
not prevalent in the U.S.? You need to understand your
climate to embrace natural ventilation, remarked Flack
and Kurtzs Bisel. Northern Europe, northern China,
and northern California are all examples of places with temperate,
nonhumid climates that lend themselves more easily to natural
ventilation than the east coast and southeast regions of the
U.S. Although more extreme climates have plenty of days
when it is delightful to have the windows open, places that
have longer springs and falls and milder summers and winters
have more incentive to take advantage of the natural climate
in building design.
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