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Engineered Systems NEWSHVAC Engineering SectorsHigh-Performance Buildings & AutomationCase in PointCommercial HVAC

CASE IN POINT

Tech campus wins over skeptics with energy optimization

f
This graph from the optimization platform shows the usage impact at the Australian Technology Park versus baseline.
January 1, 2015

The Australian Technology Park (ATP) in Sydney is a business and technology center intended to serve as an incubator for high-tech startups with the desire to bring research and commercial interests together in a symbiotic environment. It also aims to keep its building as energy efficient as possible.

ATP is comprised of five distinct buildings located in a campus-like setting, and BuildingIQ was asked to deploy its Predictive Energy Optimization™ (PEO) model at four of the buildings. The work would begin with the building occupied by the National Information and Technology Communications Center of Australia (NICTA). The 120,577-sq-ft NICTA building is five years old and known for its energy efficiency.

According to BuildingIQ, the central challenge was whether the company’s PEO platform could make much of a difference to such a well-tuned, high-performing building. The NICTA building has a NABERS score of 5.5 — on a scale that runs from 0 to 6.0—and improvements were, at best, likely to be marginal. Although the NICTA staff strongly encouraged a trial run and were extremely receptive to new technology, their expectations for significant energy savings were low.

The client’s stated requirements for success were threefold: first, produce significant energy savings; second, improve the NABERS rating of the NICTA building if possible; and three, support and elevate the government’s drive for sustainable development.

BuildingIQ began by doing a site assessment for all four buildings, establishing a baseline of historical data, examining individual BMS and evaluating the ease with which PEO could be integrated for energy optimization. The team found that the NICTA building had a relatively new Delta BACnet system that would respond well to BuildingIQ’s platform.

Working with ATP’s facilities staff, the setup for the trial run took only about a week. The extended learning phase — when the model learns the specific thermal dynamics of the building under changing conditions — lasted for about a month and a half. After that, the optimization process began. Typically, the savings increase as the model continues to refine the parameters and improve the accuracy of its prediction.

The relationship with the technical staff at NICTA bordered on a strategic alliance, as they had a desire to support energy innovation, and were rooting for the success of a sophisticated, home-grown technology. BuildingIQ’s platform evolved from research carried out over many years at Australia’s CSIRO — the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization.

The ATP staff brought the BuildingIQ team together with the four companies responsible for onsite mechanical work and BMS operations. The parties worked collaboratively to ensure success.

Early results from the NICTA trial run have shown substantial improvement in energy savings. After running for a few weeks, energy savings had reached 17% of total power. ATP staff, vendors, and NICTA colleagues were not only surprised at the savings in such a high-performing building but skeptical enough to challenge the results. The transparency of the BuildingIQ system made it a relatively straightforward matter to review the historical baseline, walk through the optimization process, and display the results using charts and graphs. They could see the kWh consumption dropping day by day and were convinced of the efficacy of BuildingIQ’s model.

 Despite the altered temperatures during optimization process, the client did not receive one single complaint from tenants. 

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