Occupant Comfort
Workspaces should be designed and operated to support the functional and environmental needs of occupants. Design for thermal comfort should be based on ASHRAE Standard 55. Design for air quality should be based on ASHRAE 62. Occupant comfort should be assessed frequently once a building is occupied, using ASHRAE’s Performance Measurement Protocols for Commercial Buildings.
Procure Products
in the Green Procurement Compilation106 Results : Occupant Comfort
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Energy Management Systems (EnMS) - GSA Sustainable Facilities Tool
...also improving health, safety and comfort, reducing emissions, and creatinghttps://sftool.gov › learn › about › 480 › energy-management-systems-enms -
Grid-Interactive Efficient Buildings - GSA Sustainable Facilities Tool
Better building control can improve comfort, health, and productivity CO2 savingshttps://sftool.gov › learn › about › 638 › grid-interactive-efficient-buildings -
Resources > Water - GSA Sustainable Facilities Tool
...require energy to heat the water to comfortable levels. As a result, reducing thehttps://sftool.gov › explore › green-building › section › 40 › water › resources-impact -
PowerPoint Presentation
...and cost effectiveness Occupant's comfort Re-tuning “Turn it off†“Turn it downâ€https://sftool.gov › Content › attachments › Iswg › iswg-tools › Nmair O and M-ISWG 12-06-2018 Final.pdf -
recommendations_on_sustainable_landscaping_practices.pdf
...ecological design goals, enhance human comfort, and provide a restorative setting...have the least impact on building occupants and neighboring communities. XIIIhttps://sftool.gov › Content › attachments › recommendations_on_sustainable_landscaping_practices.pdf -
A Temperature and Seasonal Energy Analysis of Green, White and Dark Roofs
...to the atmosphere, maintained a “comfortable†temperature above freezing duringhttps://sftool.gov › Content › attachments › Columbia_A_Temperature_ and_Seasonal_Energy_Analysis.pdf
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