Smart Design
Smart Design
Smart Design
Smart building
Intelligent buildings
Energy efficiency
Energy refurbishment
Thermal comfort
Cost effectiveness
Environment
Surroundings
Environmental protection
Ecological awareness
Integration
Remote control systems
Underfloor heating
Advanced technology
Cutting-edge
Natural resources
Sustainability
Sensor Technology
Automated process
Artificial intelligence
Smoke detection
Intrusion alarms
What Is a Smart Building?
A smart building involves the installation and use of advanced and integrated building
telecommunications, user systems, and facility management systems. Smart buildings recognize
and reflect the technological advancements and convergence of building systems, the common
elements of the systems and the additional functionality that integrated systems provide. Smart
buildings provide actionable information about a building or space within a building to allow the
Smart buildings provide the most cost effective approach to the design and the deployment of
building technology systems. The traditional way to design and construct a building is to design,
The smart building takes a different approach to designing the systems. Essentially, one designer
designs or coordinates the design of all the building technology systems into a unified and
consistent construction document. The construction document specifies each system and
addresses the common system elements or integration foundation for the systems. These include
cabling, cable pathways, equipment rooms, system databases, and communications protocols
between devices. The one consolidated design is then installed by a contractor, referred to as a
This process reduces the inefficiencies in the design and construction process saving time and
money. During the operation of the building, the building technology systems are integrated
Smart buildings are also a critical component regarding energy usage and sustainability of
buildings and the smart electrical grid. The building automation systems, such as HVAC
control, lighting control, power management, and metering play a major role in determining the
operational energy efficiency of a building. The smart electrical grid is dependent on smart
buildings.
The driving forces for smart buildings are economics, energy, and technology. Smart buildings
leverage mainstream information technology infrastructure and take advantage of existing and
emerging technology. For developers and owners, smart buildings increase the value of a
property. For property and facility managers, smart buildings provide more effective subsystems
and more efficient management options, such as the consolidation of system management. For
architects, engineers, and construction contractors, it means combining portions of the design
and construction with the resulting savings and efficiencies in project management and project
scheduling.
The new generations of smart buildings aren’t just using technology to be more efficient, but
they’re also being designed with nature as their model. Whole system integration, where the sum
of the parts is collectively in a life-long partnership with the environment, has become the
standard to strive towards when it comes to integrating the two. Today, a new social contact with
nature is uncontested, absolute, and the bedrock to innovation.
One example from nature is how some organisms leverage fluids to maintain thermal stability,
using the radiant transfer to exchange the majority of its energy. Designers can incorporate this
approach by modernizing parts and assemblies to use thermally activated surfaces, which offer
proximity thermal comfort that aligns with human physiology. Thermally activated surfaces are
central to advancing whole building solutions, by introducing radiant fields to heat and cool and
natural convection to induce ventilation, we can collectively achieve thermal comfort without the
use of current forced-air based HVAC systems.
1. People-centric – Buildings of the future are designed to function for the people who will
use them. As the needs and expectations of people continuously change, the way we
design and construct buildings must follow.
In the future, these structures and spaces will be adaptable without significant building
modification: with walls that can be moved easily and essential engineering services that
can be effortlessly altered and re-connected in new ways.
4. Sustainable – The impact of climate change and rapid population growth to our natural
resources is endangering the future of human kind, making sustainability one of the key
priorities when designing buildings of the future. Thanks to advanced technologies, smart
buildings can exist off the grid and develop self-sustaining ecosystems, enabling it to
produce energy and collect and treat water on site.
5. Learning – Buildings of the future will not only be designed for us, they will get to know
us. Every sensor, automation and monitor installed in these buildings will be integrated
into a main building management system which can capture every movement within the
building and enable the building to automatically modify its settings and continuously
self-tune.
Structural failures
Structural failure refers to defects in which a load bearing component of the building is
unable to support and transfer loads to another element. Structural failure develops due to
breakdown in the performance of the materials in a structural component may be caused by:
activities at the site resulting in faults to construction elements which later develop into
failure; issues like use of salty sand in making concrete, use of poor grade steel not as
Improper design: Failure of the engineer to account for all the loads the structure is to
carry, application of erroneous design theories, use of inaccurate data, not taking account
Foundation failures: Failure of the ground on which the foundation rests to carry load,
causing displacements, altering the stress distribution to the whole structure and so on.
Overloading: Excess loads that are applied beyond that which had been anticipated,
these loads might be due to vibrating earthquake, heavy snow loads, hurricanes, storage,