Abstract:
Construction industries may play a critical role in dominant energy usage as pressure
mounts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Energy efficiency investments can be a
profitable way to reduce carbon emissions. Solar buildings with Net-Zero Energy are
emerging as a promising way for reducing buildings' environmental impact. In Lebanon,
there is a transition from vernacular to modern architecture in the early twentieth century.
It is tightly related to the implementation of concrete in construction and the formation of
the national cement industry, which paved the way for the creation of new building types.
Not to mention the second industrial revolution, which had a significant impact on energy
consumption. Yet the transition from vernacular to modern architecture created a missing
link in architectural development. The vernacular type depended on several strategies for
passive design, whereas modern architecture lost many of these characteristics. The focus
is to study the Vernacular Architecture that will be used to investigate the early solutions
and passive strategies. These strategies will be developed and implemented to improve
energy efficiency while also incorporating active strategies, which will be analyzed in the
Net-Zero Energy techniques and implemented in the optimization and results. Existing
buildings will be addressed focusing on the residential typology of the coastal zone which
is the most urbanized area that has undergone several changes and still has both the
vernacular and modern identities. This research intends to fill the missing link of
architectural development by trying to reach the optimal combination between passive and
active techniques. The applicability and value proposition of Net Zero Energy, on the
existing residential typology of the coastal region in Lebanon, will be assessed through
different methods and simulations.
Description:
M.A. -- Faculty of Architecture, Art and Design, Notre Dame University, Louaize, 2023; "A thesis presented to the Faculty of Architecture, Art and Design in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Architecture in Sustainable Architecture."; Includes bibliographical references (pages 111-119).