First time here? Check out the Help page!

Question-and-Answer Resource for the Building Energy Modeling Community
Get started with the Help page
Ask Your Question
1

how can i represent pilotis during modeling?

asked 4 years ago

jhonata2187's avatar

updated 4 years ago

My building has the first suspended floor and free ground composed of pilotis. I would like to know how to represent how this first floor can be suspended by pilotis

Preview: (hide)

Comments

@jhonata2187 to confirm, are the pilotis that you're referring to vertical piers, columns, stilts, etc.? If so, do you have any floor surfaces touching soil or are all floor surfaces suspended above ground by pilotis? You should have enough karma to add an image to your post to help illustrate what you want to simulate.

Aaron Boranian's avatar Aaron Boranian  ( 4 years ago )

Pilotis are a typical solution of Modern Brazilian Architecture, where the body of the building is suspended from the ground, leaving only its pillars in the gap... But in an elegant way... https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/im...

Carlos Krebs's avatar Carlos Krebs  ( 4 years ago )

1 Answer

Sort by » oldest newest most voted
1

answered 4 years ago

Petros Dalavouras's avatar

If your pilotis is an open space, the boundary condition of the floor should be outdoors, wind exposed but not sun exposed. You should also take into consideration the thermal bridge effects from the columns beams etc so as to increase the U-value of your floor construction accordingly

Preview: (hide)
link

Comments

What is the correct way to calculate U-value impact of the column? Typically we assumes surfaces transfer heat in 1D (perpendicular to surface plane) given negligible heat transfer parallel to construction layers. For 2D thermal bridging (windows,studs) where we account (by projection from 2D to 1D) for 2D impacts, we still assume heat transfer is negligible in surface plane and only take 2D slices perpendicular to it, or do area-weighted calculations.

I can't quite figure out the correct way to conceptualize column heat transfer because this 2D assumption doesn't hold.

saeranv's avatar saeranv  ( 3 years ago )

There are some posts in the forum that adress this issue. For example: Thermal Resistance of Linear thermal bridgesCalculating 3D Thermal BridgesHow to include thermal bridges in the analysis in the OpenStudio - EnergyPlus? and others. If these doesn't help, you should probably post this as a new question

Petros Dalavouras's avatar Petros Dalavouras  ( 3 years ago )

Your Answer

Please start posting anonymously - your entry will be published after you log in or create a new account.

Add Answer

Training Workshops

Careers

Question Tools

1 follower

Stats

Asked: 4 years ago

Seen: 203 times

Last updated: Apr 02 '21