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Sustainable refurbishment of existing, typical single-family residential buildings in Greece

Flora Bougiatioti (Ethniko Metsobio Polytechneio Scholi Architektonon Michanikon, Athens, Greece)
Eleni Alexandrou (Ethniko Metsobio Polytechneio Scholi Architektonon Michanikon, Athens, Greece)
Miltiadis Katsaros (Ethniko Metsobio Polytechneio Scholi Architektonon Michanikon, Athens, Greece)

International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation

ISSN: 2398-4708

Article publication date: 30 March 2023

138

Abstract

Purpose

Residential buildings in Greece constitute an important portion of the existing building stock. Furthermore, most of these buildings were built prior to the first Thermal Insulation Code of 1981. The article focuses on existing, typical residences built after 1920, which are found mostly in suburban areas and settlements all around Greece. The purpose of the research is to evaluate the effect of simple bioclimatic interventions focused on the improvement of their diurnal, inter-seasonal and annual thermal performance.

Design/methodology/approach

The applied strategies include application of thermal insulation in the building shell and openings, passive solar systems for the heating period and shading and natural ventilation for the summer period. The effect of the strategies is analysed with the use of building energy analysis. The simulation method was selected because it provides the possibility of parametric analysis and comparisons for different proposals in different orientations.

Findings

The results show that the increased thermal mass of the construction is the most decisive parameter of the thermal behaviour throughout the year.

Research limitations/implications

The typical residences under investigation are often found in urban and/or suburban surroundings. These mostly refer to free-standing buildings situated, which, in many cases, do not have the disadvantages and limitations that the geometrical characteristics of densely built urban locations impose on incident solar radiation (e.g. overshadowing during the winter) and air circulation (e.g. reduce natural ventilation during the summer). Nevertheless, even in these cases, the surrounding built environment may also have relevant negative effects, which were not taken under consideration and could be included in further, future research that will include the effect of various orientations, as well as of neighbouring buildings.

Practical implications

Existing residences built prior to the first Thermal Insulation Code (1981) form an important part of the building stock. Consequently their energy upgrade could contribute to significant conventional energy savings for heating and cooling, along with the inter-seasonal improvement of interior thermal comfort conditions.

Social implications

The proposed interventions can improve thermal comfort conditions and lead to a reduction of energy consumption for heating and cooling, which is an important step against energy poverty and the on-going energy crisis.

Originality/value

The proposed interventions only involve the building envelope and are simple with relatively low cost.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their time and effort to review the manuscript, as well as for their invaluable observations and comments, which helped to improve the quality of this article.

Citation

Bougiatioti, F., Alexandrou, E. and Katsaros, M. (2023), "Sustainable refurbishment of existing, typical single-family residential buildings in Greece", International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJBPA-09-2022-0157

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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