December 2012 |
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Berkeley Lab Breaks Ground on Flexible Design Building to Test Low-energy Systems and Components
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Berkeley, Calif., Dec. 7, 2012—Today marks the start of a new era for
research on energy-efficient buildings at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Lab leadership and distinguished guests from
the U.S. Department of Energy, the state of California, utilities and
the building industry broke ground on the start of construction for the
Facility for Low-Energy eXperiments on Buildings (FLEXLAB).
“Our new FLEXLAB facility will open the doors to many new ideas on how
we can reduce energy consumed by buildings. Today, buildings are
responsible for about 40 percent of our nation’s greenhouse gas
emissions,” says Ashok Gadgil, director of Berkeley Lab’s Environmental
Energy Technologies Division (EETD). “Finding new, advanced,
building technologies should help us save up to 80 percent on new
construction.”
Facility for Low-Energy eXperiments on Buildings (FLEXLAB)
“FLEXLAB will be the most advanced heavily-instrumented facility for
developing and validating the performance of new energy-efficient
building controls and technologies in the U.S.,” says Cindy Regnier,
Technical Manager of the FLEXLAB facility. “By allowing scientists, the
building industry, and the architecture and engineering community a
chance to change out and combine building components to develop them as
integrated systems, FLEXLAB will allow its users to develop
low-energy-use building designs whose total energy savings will be
greater than the additive savings of the individual components.”
Joining Berkeley Lab Deputy Director Horst Simon for the groundbreaking
were U.S. Department of Energy Deputy Assistant Secretary for Renewable
Energy, Steven Chalk, and California Energy Commission Chairman Robert
Weisenmiller, among others.
Construction teams will shortly begin building the four testbeds that
collectively form the new exterior portion of FLEXLAB located outside
an existing building at Berkeley Lab. (Two testbeds within an adjacent
existing building were completed in November and are now in the
start-up phase of their operation.)
When FLEXLAB is completed late in 2013, researchers in EETD, and its
public and private sector research partners, will be able to swap out
building components and systems in the modules, and measure, analyze
and improve their performance under real world conditions. The facility
will accelerate the development and deployment of controls and
technologies for both retrofit and new construction applications and
allow energy use of innovative solutions to be benchmarked against
standard building practice. The six interior and exterior
testbeds together will total more than 9,000 square feet of floorspace,
and are funded with $15.9 million from the American Reinvestment and
Recovery Act through the U.S. Department of Energy.
In the new exterior facility, each module will be
reconfigurable—depending on the research plan, users will be able to
replace windows, walls, access floor, lighting, HVAC systems and other
elements with prototypes for testing. The interior spaces will be
reconfigurable as well, and can be divided into zones and outfitted as
offices. The test spaces will normally be unoccupied, but can be
utilized by people to test thermal and visual comfort and assess the
interface with control systems.
One testbed can be rotated to any orientation with respect to the
sun. It can reset its position every 60 seconds to align with
solar orientation to measure how sun position impacts energy use and
interior conditions.
Another double-height testbed is designed to test technologies utilized
in two-story high structures, with applications that include big box
retail environments. These modules will also test technologies such as
skylights and roof glazings.
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FLEXLAB will include one of the most extensive data acquisition and
control capabilities ever used in a building test facility, allowing
industry partners to remotely operate the facility and analyze
performance data. Outdoor weather and solar conditions,
occupancy sensors, airflow and room pressure measurements, lighting and
glare, and thermal conditions are among the factors that the facility’s
instrumentation will be able to monitor.
Among the visitors participating in today’s groundbreaking were
representatives from Philips Lighting and Daikin as early research
partners for FLEXLAB, as well as PG&E and San Jose Prospect, an
early deployment partner.
After the groundbreaking ceremony, an industry roundtable was held
focusing on FLEXLAB’s capabilities, industry research needs, and the
possibilities for collaborative research in the new facility.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) addresses the
world’s most urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable
energy, protecting human health, creating new materials, and revealing
the origin and fate of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Lab’s
scientific expertise has been recognized with 13 Nobel prizes. The
University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department
of Energy’s Office of Science. For more, visit www.lbl.gov.
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