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Article

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Title

Solar energy integration in heritage buildings: A case study of St. Nicholas Church

Authors

[ 1 ] Wydział Architektury, Politechnika Poznańska | [ SzD ] doctoral school student

Scientific discipline (Law 2.0)

[2.1] Architecture and urban planning

Year of publication

2024

Published in

Energy Reports

Journal year: 2024 | Journal volume: vol. 11

Article type

scientific article

Publication language

english

Keywords
EN
  • Day Lighting
  • Photovoltaic (PVs)
  • Direct current (DC)
  • Heating
  • Ventilating
  • Air conditioning (HVAC)
  • Historical Building
Abstract

EN As climate change accelerates and operational energy burdens strain resources, protecting irreplaceable cultural heritage assets requires urgent prioritization to align preservation with principles of environmental and economic sustainability. Global building energy associated carbon dioxide emissions are projected to escalate over 50% by 2060 in a business as usual scenario, necessitating extensive retrofitting interventions. This research pioneer’s solar technology integration methodologies for heritage sites by developing an original framework evaluating renewable addition feasibility based on comprehensive multi-criteria assessments integrating architectural, cultural, climatic and energy data analytic techniques with participatory planning essential for meaningful adoption. Outcomes aim conveying solar solutions as contemporary manifestations of custodial stewardship honoring artifacts from prior generations by sustaining their continuation using state-of-the-art environmental control modernizations. Demonstration case studies confirm site net-zero energy balances attainable today through 50% consumption reductions from envelope and lighting upgrades supplemented by distributed 20% efficiency building-integrated photovoltaic arrays sized under 50 W/m2 for negligible visibility or structural impacts. Controlled demonstration installations enable incremental capacity expansion validating projections to overcome reservations around inadequately modeled material impacts over full weathering exposure cycles. Participatory monitoring and contextual priority balancing thereby foster smooth logistical coordination and optimized generative restoration.

Pages (from - to)

4177 - 4191

DOI

10.1016/j.egyr.2024.03.043

URL

https://authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S2352-4847(24)00189-6

Ministry points / journal

100

Impact Factor

5,2 [List 2022]

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