About Course
Beyond Smart Building Commissioning – SBCx Training
Today’s buildings consume a lot of energy, and they’re getting older, so they are ripe for facility improvements that can enable lower operating costs, greater reliability, and capital investment avoidance. But what’s probably most important is that both building owners and facility managers are ready for chances to make their buildings better places to work with better working conditions and better experiences for their tenants. Smart Building Commissioning, a Beyond Smart Cities approach to SMART building commissioning, enables the optimisation of building systems and equipment to enhance performance and efficiencies.
In point of fact, SBCx projects may save anywhere from 10 to 20 percent of the energy that they use, and they often pay for themselves in around two years’ time.
SMART Commissioning provides you with simple access to trustworthy data that helps benchmark for future study and comparison, and its reporting is meant to assist owners in better comprehending the performance efficiencies and possible savings.
Krishnaji Pawar, the CEO and founder of Beyond Smart Cities, is in charge of creating the Beyond Smart Building Commissioning – SBCx training course.
Specialises in developing sustainable design strategies for Green Building Certification Systems (LEED, GSAS, ACP, ISO 14001:2015, etc.), Energy Management, Energy Efficiency, Energy Audit, Building Commissioning, Environmental Impact Assessment, and Environmental Management Systems.
We are now aware that all building systems and components are able to collect and interpret huge quantities of data, but we also know that data is only helpful when it is put into action. The capacity of SBCx to harness the power of digitalization and make use of the data that is readily accessible to drive the commissioning process is what makes it one of the most cost-effective solutions available.
Building commissioning programmes that are smart provide a strategy for making the most of a structure by ensuring that it is examined and designed in the most effective manner possible. A piecemeal approach to maintaining a building’s good functioning may be detrimental to the structure’s long-term health. Nevertheless, using an integrated, intelligent, and digital strategy that blends one-time projects with continuous services has the potential to bring down energy costs and make it feasible to continue increasing performance.
Learning Objectives:
- Introduction as well as a Brief Course Overview
- Smart Commissioning of Buildings
- Learn Smart Building Assessment- SBCx
- Understanding Investigation- SBCx
- Learn Implementation- SBCx
- Understanding Hand-off- SBCx
- Learn Persistence- SBCx
- An Overview and Available Resources
Smart commissioning can help to increase efficiency and reduce risks
Learn about how a streamlined commissioning process can assist increase productivity while lowering hazards to the organisation. Plant owners can considerably minimise the risk of project overruns by adopting an agile approach to commissioning and startup. In addition, this method can boost safety by minimising the amount of non-routine work that needs to be performed in the field. Doing this while lowering the amount of alarm overflow.
Commissioning programmes for smart buildings offer a road map to optimising the performance of a building by conducting thorough assessments and making detailed plans. An strategy to sustaining facility performance that is disjointed can put your building’s long-term health at risk. Nevertheless, if you take an integrated, intelligent, and digital approach that blends one-time initiatives with ongoing services, you can cut down on energy expenses while simultaneously enabling continuous performance improvements.
Our strategy for commissioning existing buildings, known as Smart Building Commissioning, enables the optimisation of building systems and equipment to improve the performance and efficiency of the facility overall. In point of fact, SBCx projects have the potential to produce energy savings of between 10 and 20 percent, and they often pay for themselves in a span of approximately two years
Course Content
Section 1: Introduction and Course Outline
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07:46
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L1. Introduction and Course Outline Handout