Reducing costs with a smart building
Thanks to smart buildings, today’s structures are alive, equipped with technology that allows for automated processes of things that have, for hundreds of years, lived in dormancy.
Many older buildings have the capability to become smart buildings, but owners and executives often overlook the perks of automation. Taking advantage of a smart building can lead to significant financial gain for property owners, and increase production of those working within these structures.
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Smart building systems also can improve building operations, sustainability and decision making. There are several ways these increasingly less expensive systems can help save money by optimizing operations and increasing efficiency. Some of these money-saving processes, according to the Building Efficiency Initiative, include:
- Matching occupancy patterns to energy use: A smart building will run leaner when there are fewer people inside.
- Proactive maintenance of equipment: Analysis algorithms will detect problems in performance before they cause expensive outages, maintaining optimum efficiency along the way.
- Dynamic power consumption: By taking signals from the electricity market and altering usage in response, a smart building ensures the lowest possible energy costs and often generates revenue by selling load reductions back to the grid.
According to Buildings, here are some more specific use cases for smart buildings:
- Smart lighting – Pair networked lighting with a building energy management system for a building that can switch lights on and off at optimal times and vary light levels, as well as do a comparative analysis of whether the impact on heating, ventilating, and air conditioning energy use that results from adjusting smart windows to let in sunlight will be smaller or greater than darkening the windows and turning the lights up.
- Smart HVAC – The report, New Horizons for Energy Efficiency, recommends tying HVAC into the building energy management system to maximize savings.
- Other smart building components – Smart windows that lighten or darken depending on sunlight intensity are recommended, as they can help reduce the HVAC and lighting loads and reduce glare. A study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory cited in the ACEEE report described savings of 19-26% on cooling and 48-67% on lighting if smart windows are implemented.
Additional savings may be possible by using advanced power strips to reduce plug loads, smart ceiling fans that help regulate the thermostat, destination dispatch controls for elevators, and televisions, refrigerators and dishwashers that interact with a power grid to assist with peak load management.
Decreasing costs with a warm welcome to the IoT
No, one doesn’t need to build a building from the ground up to implement smart technology. Older buildings can use building management systems, like those from Johnson Controls, Trane or Honeywell, to wake older buildings from their sleep, and teach them to become smart. Unfortunately, BMS implementation is generally expensive, difficult to implement and requires specialized installation.
The average cost of using a BMS to turn a building smart is around $2.30 per square foot, or $250,000 for 100,000 square feet, according to Buildings. This makes a building owner’s return on investment a bit tricky.
Thankfully, the “internet of things,” with its low-powered networks and inexpensive sensors, is helping keep smart building costs down. According to Buildings, adding IoT-based controls and monitoring to a building can cost from just $5,000 to $50,000, a small portion of traditional BMS costs.
Standalone building systems need equipment rooms and cabling, as well as cabling pathways.
“With smart building concepts, you can reduce the cable and pathways by coordinating infrastructure,” Jim Sinopoli, managing principal of Smart Buildings told Siemens.
Energy efficiency and big savings
A combination of lower costs of entry and increased savings – and therefore favorable return on investment – makes implementing a smart building as tempting as ever.
Commercial buildings could save up to $60 billion between 2014 and 2030 with a “comprehensive building labeling and benchmarking program.” Benefits gained from adjusting corporate tax legislation to encourage the replacement of inefficient equipment and from removing regulatory barriers to combined heat and power projects alone could reduce national energy consumption, and save the economy close to $300 billion, according to a study by the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy (ACEEE).
Intelligent efficiency measures applied to just 35% of eligible commercial floor area in buildings with 50,000 or more square feet could save upwards of 50 terawatt-hours by 2030, assuming a conservative savings estimate of 20% – more than 1% of U.S. projected energy use by that year. Combined with 17 other common-sense efficiency measures, such as smart manufacturing and voltage reduction, the U.S. could save 22% of its total projected electricity use in 2030.
MGM Resorts International acquired several hotels with various types of building automation systems, all of which saved hundreds of thousands of dollars with efficient energy systems.
“When you pay in excess of $1 million monthly for energy, even 5% savings is a huge amount of money,” said John Leslie, manager of energy and building automation at MGM Resorts, to Siemens. Leslie’s smart building management system at The Mirage in Las Vegas uses load-shedding programs to keep from operating during peak demand times.