Natural ventilation is a proven strategy for maintaining thermal comfort in non-domestic buildings in the UK. The
energy consumption and thus the carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to global warming are lower than in
conventional air-conditioned buildings. However, the ambient temperatures in the UK have risen over the last decade
and new climatic data for use in the design of naturally ventilated buildings has been published. Using these data and
dynamic thermal modelling, it is shown that passive stack ventilation alone was unlikely to maintain summertime
comfort in a proposed University College London building within an urban heat island. The stack ventilation strategy
was evolved by the introduction of passive downdraught cooling. This low-energy technique enables cooled air to be
distributed throughout the building without mechanical assistance. The underlying principles of the technique were
explored using physical models and the anticipated performance predicted using thermal modelling. The architectural
integration is illustrated and the control strategy described. The resulting building is believed to be the first large-scale
application of the passive downdraught cooling technique; construction began in late 2003.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
SHORT, C.A., LOMAS, K.J. and WOODS, A., 2004. Design strategy for low-energy ventilation and cooling within an urban heat island. Building Research and Information, 32 (3), pp. 187 - 206