BS ISO 17772 - Indoor environmental quality
The main objective of building services engineers and anyone involved in designing a built environment is to create a space conducive to the function of the building. Too often this gets lost in the plethora of other requirements; regulatory, economic and aesthetic.
At BSRIA, we see specifications in which the design parameters are not clearly defined and this frequently leads to gaps between expectation and performance and doubts about whether the completed building meets the client’s requirements. Some specifications indicate winter or summer temperatures, with no mention of tolerances or where the temperatures must be measured.
There are hundreds of useful standards, guides and codes of practice to every aspect of the built environment and of course, BSRIA contributes to this array of publications. But some buildings don’t warrant all the detail from these publications and a basic specification is better than no specification.
A new standard published in January 2018 aims to bring together the key requirements for Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) - BS ISO 17772-1:2017 'Energy performance of buildings. Indoor environmental quality. Indoor environmental input parameters for the design and assessment of energy performance of buildings'.
The standard specifies requirements for indoor environmental parameters: temperature, indoor air quality, lighting and acoustics and specifies how to establish these parameters for environmental design. It was drafted to provide a common basis for energy performance calculations but it has wider application as a basic standard for IEQ.
This standard is applicable where the criteria for indoor environment are set for human occupancy and where the production or process does not have a major impact on indoor environment. It includes design criteria for the local thermal comfort factors, draught, radiant temperature asymmetry, vertical air temperature differences and floor surface temperature. It also specifies occupancy schedules to be used in standard energy calculations and how different categories of criteria for the indoor environment can be used.
The criteria in this standard can also be used in national energy calculation methods. It sets criteria for the indoor environment based on existing standards and reports.
It does not specify design methods, but gives input parameters to the design of building envelope, heating, cooling, ventilation and lighting.
The standard defines four levels of IEQ:
- IEQi: High level of expectation and also recommended for spaces occupied by very sensitive and fragile persons with special requirements like some disabilities, sick, very young children and elderly persons, to increase accessibility.
- IEQii: Normal level of expectation.
- IEQiii: An acceptable, moderate level of expectation.
- IEQiv: Low level of expectation. This category should only be accepted for a limited part of the year.
The format of the standard is that the user should define the level of performance required for each parameter, to this end it provides forms to be completed by the user in Annexes A to F. However, in Annexes H to L it provides ‘default values’ for the parameters entered on the same forms and these are likely to be widely used.
Temperature is specified as the ‘Operative temperature’ effectively the mean of air temperature and radiant temperature at the building user’s location in most environments, where the air speed is under 0.2 m/s. Adaptive temperature, the user-acceptable temperature modified by the external temperature over the past seven days, is also recognised as relevant for spaces without mechanical cooling.
This article was originally published here by BSRIA in January 2018. It was written by Colin Pearson, Team Leader, BSRIA Sustainable Construction Group.
--BSRIA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
Featured articles and news
The continued ISG fall out, where to go?
Support for ISG contractors, companies and employees.
New HES national centre for traditional building retrofit
Announced as HES publishes survey results which reveal strong support for retrofit.
Retrofit of Buildings, a CIOB Technical Publication
Expected to become one of the largest activities in the global construction industry.
The ECA industry focus video channel
Keeping update with the industry session by session.
Over 25 recorded informations sessions freely available.
AT Awards 2024 ceremony East London October 25th.
Revisiting the AT community at the 2023 awards evening.
The Community Housing Fund and built affordable homes
CLTN reviews the impact of the Fund and calls for extension.
The grading system of the Regulator for Social Housing
A background, an explanation and ten recent enforcements.
Construction, repair and maintenance. Book review.
Putting new life into a city with a 1900 year history.
BSRIA Briefing 2024: Sustainable Futures speakers
Redefining Retrofit for Net Zero Living 22 Nov.
Wall of support for post-Grenfell regulation of electricians
Call for a shake-up of the construction industry highlighted on radio.
Digital sustainability through future AEC tools
Bringing together industry and academia to meet challenges.
Skills gap for net zero highlighted to Minister for Industry
ECA convenes roundtable discussion at Portcullis House.
Evidencing Net Zero with the new UK buildings standard
Pilot version with detailed excel proforma out now!
Scottish Building Safety Levy, in consultation
From direct remediation and the RPDT, to the costs and alternatives.
Waves of warmer homes grants for the rental sector
Boosting energy efficiency standards for all rented homes.
A refocus of the National Planning Policy Framework
Key terms described in brief, as the consultation closes the evening of the 24th.
Fortified farmhouses of the unruly 16th-and 17th-century borders.