Building Management Systems Case Study

Reducing energy cost and carbon emissions is a key ambition of the environmental strategy at Henley Business School, where a rich and varied estate presents a significant challenge in this regard.

Henley sought to investigate the use of modern technology to better manage energy demand and initiated a pilot project in their student accommodation to draw practical and applicable conclusions.
Henley-Case-Study-BMS

BMS-Readings
For the period of sampling, the energy consumed in the controlled block is 0.28 kWh in the uncontrolled block 0.397 kWh, a difference of 41%. The cost per KWh is an arbitrary figure at this stage.
BMS-Energy-Cost
In comparison, the controlled block for that day uses far less energy (peaks at 0.5 not 1.0-2.0) with lower Co2 emissions and cost. Closed-loop logic maintains a more stable temperature environment through the day.

BMS-DiagnosisIn the above graph of daily energy use and Co2 emission from the controlled block, Hansett detected the inconsistent behaviour of the heating system- one block was on at night the other wasn’t. This behaviour had remained unobserved for a significant period because the existing system could not deliver this data. Accurate diagnosis is a vital stage in the provision of solutions for efficiency improvements. There is no point in fixing the wrong problem.

 

The study demonstrated the following:

  • The control and AM&T functionality of Hansett BMS software using Modbus compliant sensors and actuators.
  • The seamless integration of data from the controls system and the business systems of the business school.
  • That Hansett BMS can be installed and supported by IT Engineers without specialist controls expertise and used by non-technical operators.

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