Reprint

Sustainable Building and Indoor Air Quality

Edited by
July 2021
374 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-1106-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-1107-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Sustainable Building and Indoor Air Quality that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities
Summary
This Special Issue addresses a topic of great contemporary relevance; in developed countries, most of peoples’ time is spent indoors and, depending on each person, the presence in the home ranges from 60% to 90% of the day, and 30% of that time is spent sleeping. Taking into account these data, indoor residential environments have a direct influence on human health. In addition to this, in developing countries, significant levels of indoor pollution make housing unsafe, with a detrimental impact on the health of inhabitants. Housing is therefore a key health factor for people all over the world, and various parameters such as air quality, ventilation, hygrothermal comfort, lighting, physical environment, and building efficiency, among others, can contribute to healthy architecture, and the conditions that can result from the poor application of these parameters.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© by the authors
Keywords
vernacular architecture; sustainability; energy efficiency; history; statistics; society; acoustics; environmental quality; learning space; occupant comfort; sustainable architecture; sustainable building; visual comfort; thermal comfort; ventilation comfort; VOCs; polymer-based items; indoor air quality; test emission chamber; exposure scenario; natural lighting; visual comfort; artificial lighting; indoor lighting design; chronodisruption; circadian rhythms; daylighting; sustainable lighting design; LED luminaires; indoor environment quality; classroom lighting; sustainable development; desalination; reverse osmosis; renewable energies; environmental impacts; decision support systems; types of contract; in-vehicle air quality; pollution model; thermal environment; solar radiation; VOCs exposure; CFD; environmental health; building energy simulation; water flow glazing; experimental validation; schools; heat perception; user’s perception; thermal comfort; qualitative technique; POE; weather file management; weather datasets; weather stations; building energy simulation; sensitivity analysis of weather parameters; thermal zone temperature; building energy management; water flow glazing; unitized facade; building energy management; Water Flow Glazing; mean radiant temperature; final energy consumption; Artificial Neural Network (ANN); Global Data Assimilation System (GDAS); Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP); photovoltaic power; weather data; indoor air quality; facility management; construction materials; “smelly buildings”; Belgrade; Serbia; Mexico; energy simulation; building energy model; Open Studio; SGSAVE; NOM-020-ENER-2011; climate zoning; traditional construction systems; social housing; verification method; climate change; global warming; carbon footprint; GHG emissions; climate emergency; hydrogen; PEM fuel cells; cogeneration; building sustainability; energy saving; hygrothermal comfort; indoor green; vertical greenery; indoor air quality; cost-benefit-ratio; sick leave; absenteeism; alternative quantification method