Performance of passive retrofit measures for historic buildings that house artefacts viable for future conditions

被引:31
作者
Coelho, Guilherme B. A. [1 ]
Henriques, Fernando M. A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Lusofona Univ, DREAMS, Campo Grande 376, P-1749024 Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Univ Nova Lisboa, FCT, Dept Engn Civil, Fac Ciencias & Tecnol, P-2829516 Caparica, Portugal
关键词
Historic building; Climate change; Computational model; Retrofit measures; Artefacts conservation; Thermal comfort; PREVENTIVE CONSERVATION; CHANGING CLIMATE; INDOOR CLIMATE; SIMULATION; IMPACT; CHURCHES; HERITAGE; MODELS; RISK; AIR;
D O I
10.1016/j.scs.2021.102982
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Retrofitting a building normally aims to achieve a higher quality indoor climate in terms of thermal comfort or in terms of air quality, as well as reducing the building's energy consumption. Alternatively, in buildings that house artefacts, the application of retrofit measures normally aims to improve the indoor climate in terms of the artefacts' conservation. However, the outdoor climate, which greatly influences the indoor climate of buildings, is changing significantly. Hence, it is obvious that when retrofitting a building it is of key importance to consider this change, especially in historic buildings that house high-valued artefacts. This paper aims to study the performance of several types of retrofit measures in historic buildings that house artefacts by considering climate change. A validated hygrothermal model of a 13th-century church was used coupled with future weather files and a risk-assessment methodology based on damage functions. It was found that passive retrofit measures can mitigate some of the negative impacts that climate change is expected to induce in historic buildings that house artefacts. However, these measures can also lead to the decrease of the conservation metrics. Consequently, ranges of thicknesses of the analysed retrofit measures that ensure the conservation metrics are presented.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 66 条
[31]   Climate for Culture: assessing the impact of climate change on the future indoor climate in historic buildings using simulations [J].
Leissner, Johanna ;
Kilian, Ralf ;
Kotova, Lola ;
Jacob, Daniela ;
Mikolajewicz, Uwe ;
Brostrom, Tor ;
Ashley-Smith, Jonathan ;
Schellen, Henk L. ;
Martens, Marco ;
van Schijndel, Jos ;
Antretter, Florian ;
Winkler, Matthias ;
Bertolin, Chiara ;
Camuffo, Dario ;
Simeunovic, Goran ;
Vyhlidal, Tomas .
HERITAGE SCIENCE, 2015, 3
[32]  
LG10, 1999, LG10 CIBSE
[33]   Energy-efficiency measures for heritage buildings: A literature review [J].
Lidelow, Sofia ;
Orn, Tomas ;
Luciani, Andrea ;
Rizzo, Agatino .
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2019, 45 :231-242
[34]   Review of preventive conservation in museum buildings [J].
Lucchi, Elena .
JOURNAL OF CULTURAL HERITAGE, 2018, 29 :180-193
[35]   The assessment of environmental conditioning techniques and their energy performance in historic churches located in Mediterranean climate [J].
Ma Munoz-Gonzalez, Carmen ;
Leon-Rodriguez, A. L. ;
Campano-Laborda, M. ;
Teeling, C. ;
Baglioni, R. .
JOURNAL OF CULTURAL HERITAGE, 2018, 34 :74-82
[36]   Evaluation of the hygrothermal properties of thermal rendering systems [J].
Maia, J. ;
Ramos, Nuno M. M. ;
Veiga, R. .
BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 144 :437-449
[37]  
Martens M, 2012, CLIMATE RISK ASSESSM, DOI [10.6100/IR729797, DOI 10.6100/IR729797]
[38]  
Mecklenburg M. F., 1998, Painted Wood: History and Conservation
[39]  
Michalski S., 2002, ICOM Committee for Conservation, 13th Triennial Meeting, Rio de Janeiro, 22-27 September 2002: Preprints, VI, P66
[40]   Are the Best Available Technologies the only viable for energy interventions in historical buildings? [J].
Milone, Daniele ;
Peri, Giorgia ;
Pitruzzella, Salvatore ;
Rizzo, Gianfranco .
ENERGY AND BUILDINGS, 2015, 95 :39-46