Green building technology uses advanced technologies to develop buildings with minimal environmental impact throughout all lifecycle stages: design, construction, operation, maintenance, renovation, and demolition. Due to the myriad benefits of green building technology, builder engineers, architecture firms, and facility managers increasingly embrace concepts that produce more efficient buildings, construction, and operation costs.
The Top 5 Green Technologies Transforming Facility Management Right Now: Solutions for the Built Environment
Central to green building technology is efficiency, from energy to materials to water, operations and maintenance optimization, to waste and toxic reduction. The overall goal of green building is to reduce buildings' adverse environmental effects, including the emission of carbon dioxide and other poisonous gases and the depletion of natural resources through irresponsible harvesting of construction materials.
1. Green Infrastructure
Runoff from stormwater is a significant cause of water pollution, particularly in urban areas.Green infrastructure filters and absorbs stormwater where it falls. Green infrastructure involves landscaping and designing systems that manage stormwater through plants and soil in urban areas to control stormwater absorption. By encouraging the growth of plants in urban areas, green infrastructure helps lower the heat-island effect produced by heat-absorbing pavements and metallic street furniture.
2. Electrochromic Glass
Also known as smart glass, electrochromic glass uses a tiny gust of electricity to charge ions on a window layer and alter the light it reflects.lectrochromic glass allows you to choose the amount of light you want to stop using intelligent building control systems. For example, future skyscrapers will likely have windows that tint automatically during the daytime and become transparent at night. Proponents of electrochromic glass say the technology could reduce a building's heating, ventilation, and air conditioning costs by 25%.
3. Cool-Roof System
A cool roof is a rooftop designed to reflect more sunlight and absorb less heat than a standard roof. Under the summer sun, dark shingle roofs can reach temperatures upwards of around 150 degrees Fahrenheit, straining air conditioning systems and thus raising carbon emissions. This reduces the strain on air conditioning systems, reducing carbon emissions from powering the cooling system. Cool roof systems can also lower urban and suburban areas' heat island effect.
4. Smart Appliances
Increasing modern home appliances with innovative technology saves energy and makes our lives easier. For example, intelligent washing machines, dishwashers, and refrigerators are connected to smart meters to make them energy-efficient. Smart and advanced electric meters collect real-time data and communicate with devices to generate valuable power usage data. With this data, the appliances can determine power rates and automatically operate at lower levels.
5. Zero-Energy Buildings
Zero-energy buildings are designed to produce electricity through renewable energy, thus eliminating the need to connect to the standard electric grid. Indeed, a zero-energy building consumes zero net energy per year and produces no carbon emissions since it relies on renewable energy generators such as wind and solar. While this may sound like an ambitious future green building technology, the construction of zero-energy buildings is already happening in developed nations, with governments offering subsidies to incentivize the practice.
Solutions for the Built Environment
Intelis develops intelligent software solutions that optimize facility condition assessments, facility management, physical assets, and capital planning for the built environment. We empower companies to achieve goals and deliver on their mission through innovative technology with configurable mobile platforms.