lessthantag
REGISTERED
Hello all - I have a project within a small portion of an existing building that is undergoing a change in occupancy and it is assumed to increase energy usage (going from a retail store to a restaurant). As such, we will need to bring our space up to the current version of the code, no issues understanding that.
My question is, what defines the prior and new energy uses that you are comparing to determine you will in fact use more energy? I do not have energy/utility data from the prior tenant to understand what it used to be, and my project will be done prescriptively (no energy modeling). What if it was a horribly old and inefficient office space, but the intended new program is a highly efficient library, how does one prove they will be using less energy with the new project? Should you use the median Energy Star EUI metrics? Or are there other EUI databases that folks have referenced before?
Thanks!
My question is, what defines the prior and new energy uses that you are comparing to determine you will in fact use more energy? I do not have energy/utility data from the prior tenant to understand what it used to be, and my project will be done prescriptively (no energy modeling). What if it was a horribly old and inefficient office space, but the intended new program is a highly efficient library, how does one prove they will be using less energy with the new project? Should you use the median Energy Star EUI metrics? Or are there other EUI databases that folks have referenced before?
Thanks!