November 2017 |
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"BAS's - Inclusive Open
Data-Driven Reinvention." Once we presented the question to industry experts what are the "BAS Trends for 2018” , this article created itself, the title and pull quotes all evolved from the quoted thoughts. |
Ken Sinclair Editor/Owner/Founder, AutomatedBuildings.com |
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I was requested by
Robert Beverly, the editor of Engineered Systems Magazine, to prepare a
November feature article outlining the "BAS Trends for
2018”. Quotable input was requested and provided by several
industry leaders/experts giving me their brief take on trends they find
interesting and noteworthy.
We all are very pleased to have the opportunity to share our perspectives with the consulting and facility engineers to help them understand the change that is occurring with today's Building Automation Systems, BAS.
Once
we presented the question, this article created itself, the title and
pull quotes all evolved from the quoted thoughts. We severely
limited
the thoughts of all our industry leaders/experts trying to focus on
just one thought, please understand that anyone of these quoted experts
could fill the page. If you find their comments interesting, we have
provided some links to more reading for each.
For
those that do not know me, I am Ken Sinclair, Editor/Owner/Founder,
AutomatedBuildings.com
I strive to be a Catalyst/Harbinger of the IoT future. My goals are to
inform my readers of the future of building automation, which will
involve the full embrace of IoT. I constantly outline how systems will
be smarter, self-learning, edgy, innovative, and sophisticated, and
that they will automatically configure and integrate new equipment to
optimize themselves, to self-manage and self-heal while reinventing
purposeful, productive, desirable buildings and accommodations. I also
want to help grow our only real industry resource/asset, our younger
people, by reaching out to youth with messages about our vibrant, vital
and rewarding industry.
I was the building automation columnist for ES in the 2000s, so it is
great to be invited back to help provide my 2018 perspective with the
help of these industry experts.
This assembly of information is very valuable for me as we prepare for
our AHRExpo 2018 Chicago Education sessions.
As well this industry commentary helps me assemble our November issue
of AutomatedBuildings.com themed "Agile Autodidactic Actions."
Let me explain the theme.
Agile - We all need to learn just what we need to
know, just in time, quickly and easily with agility.
Autodidactic - We need to keep on our self-educating journey to be self-taught and create self-learning companies because our teachers and trusted advisors are still learning as well. All known resources are still evolving.
Actions - Once we have learned the correct skills, we need
to turn them into action. Such is our future.
So here is hoping that we can give you fodder for your own "Agile
Autodidactic Actions" allowing you to quickly learn about "BAS's -
Inclusive Open Data-driven Reinvention."
Here are the industries quotable thoughts in no order but the shift to
data dominates.
The use of data to improve operational
results
I would propose that the one trend that is having the most significant
effect on the buildings industry is the use of data to improve
operational results. Energy savings is only part of the impact that the
move to data driven facilities is having. Organizations that learn to
manage and use the data produced by their buildings systems see
dramatic improvements in maintenance and repair operations, occupant
satisfaction, and operating costs. The data produced by smart devices
is now more valuable than the devices themselves. In society overall,
data and analytics are affecting every facet of our lives, from
impacting what we buy to how we manage our lives at home. Data is
really the ”new money.”
John Petze, Principal, Co-Founder, SkyFoundry
Executive Director, Project-Haystack.org
More reading The IoT is About Data, and Haystack Connect is
About How to Simplify the Use of Device Data - John Petze, Executive
Director, Project-Haystack.org
The data contained in a device is more
valuable than the device
Today, data contained in a device is more valuable than the device.
When it comes to data, we are in an era where data technologies and
analytics enable us to capture data from different sources; make it
consistent and meaningful and use it across multiple applications. We
have access to multiple places where data can be collected, processed,
stored and analyzed. We are now out to the edge with devices that are,
smarter; more powerful; have more capacity; offer higher levels of data
processing and increased storage capabilities and are able to do
analytics in real time locally on the device.
In as much as data volume is important, so are the decisions on how to
handle it; where to store it and where to process and analyze it. With
more devices at the edge comes more data that has the potential to
provide enhanced insights into how we manage and operate facilities.
Marc Petock, Chief Communications Officer & Vice President,
Marketing, Lynxspring,
Inc. Contributing Editor
Read more October is Cyber Security Awareness Month
Perhaps the most enduring lesson we can learn is not to wait for when
it happens, but be ready for when it does. - Marc Petock, Chief
Communications Officer, Vice President, Marketing Lynxspring &
Connexx Energy
More reading Haystack Connect 2017 Recap
The Project Haystack standard is solving the challenge and is widely
adopted and accepted, now appearing in specifications and requirements
from end users that want to ensure they can take advantage of the value
contained in their device data and make it actionable. - John Petze,
Executive Director, Project-Haystack.org, Marc Petock, Executive
Secretary, Project-Haystack.org
Open Source Finally Arrives
In
2018 we will hear much more about serious open source efforts that can
compete in the commercial BAS and data analytics market. This will be
centered mainly around software tools to support the collection,
visualization and analysis of building data. Tools such as Volttron,
UT3, ECAM, and Grafana, just to name a few, are already making data
much more accessible. These tools will start to become the basis for
commercial products and services in much the same way that software
like Linux and mySQL now provide the basis for many traditional IT
systems.
Brad White P.Eng, MASc Principal, SES Consulting Inc. Contributing
Editor
More
reading Cope with the IOT Revolution by Staying Agile
As the smart building industry rapidly evolves, management strategies
pioneered by software developers can help us successfully adapt.
Merging of the typically isolated
silos of Lighting and HVAC control.
One
of the trends that I find notable in the industry is the merging of
the typically isolated silos of Lighting and HVAC control. System
integrators (HVAC) are realizing the benefits of adding lighting
control to their offering. The technicians who are
typically balancing chillers, temperature, humidity, dew points,
pressure, etc., are finding it fairly simple to add light levels and
occupancy or schedules to new objects within their
system. The combination of the data and control of
these building segments becomes even more important as more buildings
become cloud-connected. If the systems operate on different
platforms, the cloud integration could require duplicate infrastructure
and have unique data structures which add effort and cost to the
project. Having both systems on the same
platform allows one group to take responsibility and integrate very
effectively, the proliferation of wireless products also makes this
very feasible within existing structures.
Thanks,
Troy Davis, Wireless Automation and Energy Efficiency, EnOcean
The proliferation of analytics-ready
controllers and solutions
We now live in the age of data, but the BAS industry is still fighting
battles of the 80's, protecting turf using hardware lock-in and
strong-arm channel control tactics. In 2018, we will start to truly
liberate BAS data through the proliferation of analytics-ready
controllers and solutions. The "software is eating the world" movement
will also arrive for BAS in 2018, the main course will be served.
The significant trend that I see for 2018 is how the BAS industry will
need to reinvent itself for this shift. The industry can either
continue on its current path and become the bottom feeder of the
high-value, tech-savvy cadre of new players, or it can reinvent itself
and deliver real value to building owners.
A debate about this in 2018 would be most helpful to us all.
Anto Budiardjo, Editor, A New Deal for Buildings www.newdeal.blog
Read more Analytics is Only Half the Story
A truly optimized building is a delicate balance of well designed and
maintained system through the use of digital analytics tools and a
cadre of available engineers to address matters before they become
major issues. - Anto Budiardjo, Editor, A New Deal for Buildings www.newdeal.blog
The BAS industry
is at the tail of the whip.
The
impact of the net-zero energy movement and its emphasis on measuring
whole-building energy and comfort performance will be felt more
strongly in 2018. It will be like that ‘Crack the Whip’ ice-skating
game. Some cities and regions are already reworking their
building codes around expected outcomes.
Owners are contractually obligating architects and engineers to deliver
and prove that their projects meet energy-usage and air quality
targets. Project teams are turning to their commissioning experts and
controls partners for the right sensors, systems and analytics software
to enable proper measurement and verification. The BAS industry is at
the tail of the whip. Next year, parts of it will fall in line,
offering the level of data-interoperability, security and affordability
demanded. Other parts will fall away.
Therese Sullivan, Founder, BuildingContext Ltd Editor, Haystack Connections Contributing Editor
More
reading Haystack Connections Third Edition
Look for New Edition of Haystack Connections October 1st - Therese
Sullivan, Founder, BuildingContext Ltd Editor, Haystack
Connections
Re-establishing how we do every
function to support a building.
People in buildings have new expectations for building services. With
the advent of web-everything in our homes, to our mobile devices 24/7
anywhere on earth, we now have new expectations for how we control the
temperature, lights, and shades in our office environments. We as an
industry have to evolve, change barbaric construction practices,
educate vendors what value is now, and help building owners obtain new
functionality from the systems that support them within their
buildings—all while lowering the cost of implementation. The mixture of
connected systems, the internet, and mobile devices will allow for
re-establishing how we do every function to support a building. The
creation of the IoT functions that support our buildings will become a
new industry filled with programmers, IT firms, software development
companies, and new objectives driven by people in buildings.
Scott Cochrane is President and CEO of Cochrane Supply
& Engineering
Scott also provides this trend,
A greater focus on the evolving
Master System Integrator, MSI
All MSI's put together usable tagged databases, and as these data
sources become reliable, the MSI's have started to develop tangible new
services from the data. These services include predictive maintenance,
asset tracking and management, diagnostic service alarms, and much
more. Each of these services brings new value and savings to the
owner, and that progress will be accelerated in the next year with
connections to lighting and other sensors, for example. Connections
like these will enable exciting new services like wayfinding,
conference room control, and people tracking, just to name a few. As
MSIs maximize the evolving intelligent edge and new data is generated,
we foresee MSIs continuing to evolve as well—into the new building data
architects.
More reading Master Systems Integrators (MSI)
They make sure all systems communicate properly, coordinate all project
participants, collaborate with building owners to ensure systems
information will be accessible and usable, and they develop software
layers responsible for integration, aggregation, and communication of
the building systems. - Scott Cochrane, President, CEO of Cochrane
Supply & Engineering and Brian Oswald, Managing Director for CBRE |
ESI.
Diverse skill sets and knowledge
base required to even have a worthwhile conversation
Since getting interested in the Building Automation and Controls world
about four months ago, I've noticed the prerequisite diverse skill sets
and knowledge base required to even have a worthwhile conversation
regarding BAC. There is not only need to understand how buildings
function from a mechanical/electrical/controls perspective, but
additionally to have scripting capabilities for understanding time
series data and working with API's and being able to traverse routers,
switches, and other network devices. Having just a basic
understanding of network engineering doesn't even cut it because there
is now the whole cybersecurity issue that came to light after the
Target hack. Additionally, the reason I came to CU Boulder is
that of their unique Building Systems Engineering program, but most of
that focus is on system design, not integration. If you really
want to get young talent involved - where are the co-ops and university
partnerships? Where's the chance to learn and see the challenges
faced by the industry first hand? I think there are a lot in my
generation who want to see real progress, who want green buildings to
be more than a plaque on the wall vetted through an energy modeled
building that, after RFIs and value engineering, cut 30% of the
features required to make it function at 50% more energy efficient than
a code compliant new commercial building. I'm done with hype
pamphlets and renderings created by AEC firms. I want buildings
to work as designed and that's what I find fascinating.
Cory Mosiman, University of Colorado, Boulder M.S. Architectural
Engineering 2018
https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-mosiman-9b1727101/
Not wanting to be left out I would like to add my thoughts on a trend I
am seeing now that will continue into 2018.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]"Human-Centric Building Automation"
An approach that involves a process that starts with the people you're
designing for and ends with new solutions that are tailor-made to suit
their needs. New human-centric technologies are evolving daily
that have an amazing impact on our shift from measuring the usual
empirical variables of temperature, humidity, draft/airspeed, light
levels, etc. shifting us to sensing wearables and their bio and social
feedback. Our core variables still rule the control equation, but
now deep personal information quantifies such things as health,
feeling, opinion, desire, and satisfaction, which are now all being
factored into the control equation. It is early days for
wearables and volunteered feedback but using the human-centric process
is now optimizing our control systems for improved satisfaction,
comfort and a new measured variable derived from the comfort of knowing
you are connected. This is an excellent example of the
transformation I was talking about with "People Powered Transformation.”
More reading Thanks for joining me on my "thinking out loud journey" to better understand new approaches evolving in our industry in the area of "Human-Centric Building Automation."
I
will close this feature article which is really an expression of the
state of today’s BAS industry, with all of us are engaging in a
transformation for the greater good. Transformation will occur when and
as fast as we allow it, but only when all the people it touches embrace
that coming change.
We need to engage with our future. We need to unlearn and rethink our
vast experiences. We need to revisit our preconceived notions of what
can and cannot be changed. Discovering that your learned experiences
are the new variables is very upsetting. It is, in fact, transforming.
We need to unhinge our minds and set new paths, go to lunch with the
millennial generation while inviting the Centennials or even younger
people that have grown up exclusively in the digital age. We need to
learn what we do not know and not just keep repeating to them what we
do know. We need to seek those that will lead the transformation of our
industry.
____________________________
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