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Designing, Constructing, and Renovating Retail Buildings

Tools & Guides

Whole Building Design and Construction CheckList Whole Building Design and Construction Checklist

Guidelines for Developing a Commissioning Plan

Commissioning CheckList Commissioning Activities & Documentation Checklist

Rebuild America

Building Energy Software Tools Directory

ADELINE

BLAST

BLCC

Building Design Advisor

Ventilation/Airflow

DOE 2/DOE 2.2

ENERGY-10

EnergyPlus

FRAMEplus

SERIRES

SPARK

TRNSYS

 


Designing new retail buildings using a whole building approach yields performance benefits and energy savings over the life of the building. Start by assembling an experienced design team. Your team must be familiar with integrating energy-efficient and sustainable design features and must also be knowledgeable about the electrical, structural, and mechanical systems needed to meet your store's functional and spatial requirements.

Whole-building Design Checklist

The whole building design approach looks at the interactions between building systems and components to optimize energy savings. The Whole Building Design and Construction CheckList Whole Building Design and Construction Checklist will help you keep on track—from establishing energy design goals to performing post-occupancy commissioning.

Make sure the design team is aware of your focus on energy performance. Ensure that this focus is written into both your request for proposals and your contracts with the design team professionals, and detailed in all design and construction documents.

Your contracts and design and construction documents should also reflect your commissioning plan. Commissioning is a systematic process that begins in the design phase and continues for at least one year after construction. The process ensures that the building is functioning according to the design intent, contract documents, and the owner's operational needs-and delivering the intended savings.

To develop a commissioning plan or to see a Commissioning CheckList checklist of commissioning activities and documentation visit the Building Toolbox section of this site.

Integrate Energy-Saving Design Features

The whole building approach takes into account building siting and configuration; opportunities to integrate energy-saving design features such as daylighting, passive solar and natural ventilation systems, active solar and photovoltaic systems, and efficient building envelope strategies; and selection of appliances, equipment, and materials. Cost/benefit analyses can help retail owners and operators quantify expected paybacks on various energy features and determine which options offer the best savings potential.

Use Design and Analysis Tools for Building Simulation

Computer simulations are important tools that help direct building design and cost decisions. DOE sponsors a comprehensive Building Energy Software Tools Directory that lists a number of software tools for building design and simulation. The following tools can help you simulate the energy-saving potential of various design features.

ADELINE (includes SUPERLITE and RADIANCE)
A software tool for daylighting design that links daylighting and thermal performance.

BLAST
A detailed, annual energy performance software tool capable of modeling the interactive effects of low-energy building design strategies such as daylighting, passive solar heating, and thermal mass.

BLCC
A software tool to calculate building life-cycle cost according to federal criteria.

Building Design Advisor
Provides building decision-makers with the energy-related information they need beginning in the initial, schematic phases of building design through the detailed specification of building components and systems.

CFD
An abbreviation for "computerized fluid dynamics," this highly sophisticated type of program can track the flow of air within a space or building component and determine the temperature distribution within that space during system operation. It requires considerable experience to operate, but is invaluable for assessing the effectiveness of air diffusers. Available from several vendors under several names. See the Building Energy Software Tools Directory section on ventilation/airflow.

DOE 2/DOE 2.2
An energy analysis software program that calculates the hour-by-hour energy use of a building, given detailed information on the building's location, construction, operation, and HVAC systems. A Windows-based version of DOE 2 with user-friendly interface is called POWERDOE.

ENERGY-10
An hour-by-hour, annual simulation program designed to analyze residential and commercial buildings of less than approximately 10,000 square feet (one or two zones). Specifically conceived for use during the earliest phases of design when low-energy building strategies can be incorporated at the lowest possible cost. Available from the Sustainable Buildings Industry Council (SBIC), 202-628-7400, ext. 209.

EnergyPlus
This building energy simulation program is designed for modeling buildings with associated heating, cooling, lighting, ventilating, and other energy flows. EnergyPlus builds on the most popular features and capabilities of BLAST and DOE-2 but includes many innovative simulation capabilities, time steps of less than an hour and modular systems simulation modules that are integrated with a heat balance-based zone simulation.

FRAMEplus
A powerful thermal analysis program that accurately tracks the flow of heat through assemblies. A basic tool for analyzing thermal bridging through fa¬ade elements, such as window frames. Requires some experience for optimum use.

SERIRES (also SUNREL, which is an upgraded version of SERI-RES that features enhanced algorithms)
Analyzes passive solar design and thermal performance in residential and small commercial buildings.

SPARK
Models complex building envelopes and mechanical systems that are beyond the scope of EnergyPlus and DOE-2. Good for modeling short time-step dynamics. Runs 10 to 20 times faster than similar programs.

TRNSYS
Modular FORTRAN-based transient simulation code that allows simulation of any thermal energy system, particularly solar thermal, building, and HVAC systems.

The design team for the BigHorn Retail Center in Silverthorne, Colorado, used simulation software—DOE 2 and SUNREL—to model various energy options, examining how to optimize the building's site, windows, walls, floors, and electrical and mechanical systems for maximum savings. Key design features include a translucent skylight along the length of the warehouse roof to provide natural lighting, plus clerestory windows for passive solar heating in the winter and natural ventilation cooling in the summer. A rooftop photovoltaic system provides about 25% of the building's electricity. Daylighting meets most of the building's lighting needs; compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) provide additional lighting as needed. The use of daylighting and CFLs is expected to reduce lighting energy use by 79% compared to conventional retail buildings.

Establish Environmental Guidelines for Construction

The whole building approach also extends to the construction process, with a focus on minimizing site impacts and construction wastes. Construction design documents typically focus on detailing the design elements of the finished product, and rarely set environmental guidelines to be followed during construction.

Environmental guidelines for purchasing construction materials, reducing site environmental impact, energy and water use, and construction waste management and recycling should be written into the contracts, plans, and drawings for the building.

Making Energy-Efficient Renovations

Renovation of retail buildings using the whole building approach can yield the same kind of performance benefits and energy savings. There are many ways to incorporate energy efficiency and sustainability concepts into renovation plans for your retail space. Renovation projects can range from simple relighting programs to adding a significant new addition to an existing retail building.

Careful renovation can turn wasted space into profits. The Book Mill, a retailer of quality new and used books in Shelby, North Carolina, renovated an old vacant warehouse to accommodate its high-end retail business. Undertaken with the assistance of the Uptown Shelby Association, in partnership with DOE's Rebuild America, key renovations of this Rebuild Shelby project (PDF 150 KB) included extensive insulation, caulking to seal air leaks, non-glare T-8 lighting throughout, rehabilitation of existing windows, and installation of efficient, UV-protected screens. These energy-smart retrofits provide a comfortable atmosphere for browsing customers, protect costly books from light damage, and reclaim a valuable property. The bottom line? A total utility bill of under $120 a month.

> Visit the Building Toolbox section of this site for more in-depth information on Design, Construction, and Renovation of energy-efficient retail buildings.


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