Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
The Denver Suites are located on the second lower level of the Hilton Denver City Center at 1701 California Street, Denver, Colorado 80202.
Session Topics:
Evolving Performance Indicators, Education and Training
AIA CES approved for 1.5 LU.
Presentations
1:30pm - 2:15pm
Standardized Outputs for BEM Compliance Protocols and Programs
Timothy McDowell1, Anna Jean Morton Rivera2, Neal Kruis3
1Thermal Energy System Specialists, LLC, United States of America; 2dbHMS, United States of America; 3Big Ladder Software, United States of America
Utilities, Code Authorities, and Rating Systems use building performance modeling (BPM) protocols to demonstrate design compliance, predict building performance, and justify financial incentives. However, the BPM protocols data requirements can vary greatly from protocol to protocol. The BPM protocols rely on building energy modeling (BEM) outputs to populate the requested data, but don't always align in terms of output categories, units, data aggregation, and terminology. BEM software users often manually bridge this gap to the best of their abilities to comply with the BPM protocol's data requirements. Standardizing a base set of BEM outputs for BPM protocols would streamline the submission documentation and review process, as well as simplify workflow automation.
IBPSA-USA, with funding from the DOE, created a research project to review BPM protocols and common BEM software outputs with the goal of summarizing patterns and commonalities in current practice. The report from that project provided common outputs and levels of aggregation, reporting trends, high-level recommendation for standardization, and suggested next steps.
This session will present a summary of the report and the conclusions and then open the floor to provide attendee opinions for specific issues and potential future work such as:
Should IBPSA-USA work on common definitions and terminology for protocols and BEM program outputs?
Should IBPSA-USA pursue a consensus data model for compliance protocol reporting?
Are there other protocols that should be included in a standardization?
Are there other things IBPSA-USA could do to improve the compliance modeling reporting process for practitioners?
2:15pm - 3:00pm
Public Feedback on IBPSA-USA's Certification Program Development
Timothy McDowell1, Dimitri Contoyannis2, Allen Mei3, Olivia Brady4
1Thermal Energy System Specialists, LLC, United States of America; 2Model Efficiency, United States of America; 3Cyclone Energy Group, United States of America; 4Karpman Consulting, United States of America
IBPSA-USA commissioned a report on the feasibility of forming a national certifying body to establish and oversee the quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) framework for code and beyond-code programs that use building energy modeling to help improve consistency, market acceptance and penetration of compliance modeling. That report developed a BEM Certification Body Initiative Roadmap that proposed strategies for establishing certifications for BEM tools, modelers and reviewers. Working groups were convened for each of the three certification areas to flesh out the recommendations of the report and develop seed documents that a body could utilize in the formation of a certification program.
The IBPSA-USA Certification Committee has now begun the task of implementing the seed documents into a certification program. This session will introduce the certification program including the purpose of such a program, why IBPSA-USA is a proper body to maintain such a program, and provide a high-level description of the three different certifications and how they work together. Then feedback from the audience will be solicited to provide the public's opinion on topics including:
Are such certification programs needed?
Is IBPSA-USA the appropriate body to develop such programs?
What areas are missing from the certification plans?