The Impact of Architects' Reasoning on Early Design Decision-Making for Energy-Efficient Buildings

Sid Ahmed Ouldja, Peter Demian, Eftekhari Mahroo

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Architects arguably have the greatest influence on the design of buildings. One of the key factors that make it hard to improve the energy efficiency of buildings is the use of architects? reasoning by architects at the early design stage. There is a need to assess the impact of architects? reasoning on the energy performance of the designed building. To this end, this research was conducted in two phases. Firstly, the most influential design parameters, in terms of energy efficiency, were identified and used to develop a design exercise issued to a sample of practising architects in the north of Algeria. Design exercise participants were required to minimise expected energy consumption along with the construction cost. Secondly, computer-generated dynamic design optimisation for the same design task was conducted in DesignBuilder v6. 1 .8. The computer-generated designs decisively outperformed the human-generated designs. The experienced architects achieved the least-performing designs rather than those with less experience.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalSustainability (Switzerland)
    Volume16
    Issue number18
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished (VoR) - 21 Sept 2024

    Keywords

    • sustainability
    • architects? reasoning
    • optimisation
    • pareto front
    • optimal design
    • early design decisions
    • knowledge repertoire

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