ᐅ Final energy demand kWh/(m²·year) according to the standard Energy Saving Ordinance 2016 (EnEV)
Created on: 28 Nov 2017 12:11
C
Christian NWC
Christian NW28 Nov 2017 12:11We are building a standard house with Town & Country according to the 2016 Energy Saving Ordinance. Without many extras.
What is the approximate kWh/(m2*a) final energy demand for such a house?
Do you also have a similar standard house? Even if it can't always be compared one-to-one...
What is the approximate kWh/(m2*a) final energy demand for such a house?
Do you also have a similar standard house? Even if it can't always be compared one-to-one...
C
Christian NW29 Nov 2017 15:31Is there anyone who has built a standard house according to the 2016 Energy Saving Ordinance and can give me a reference point?
T
toxicmolotof29 Nov 2017 15:39There is no standard house with a “d.” There are only reference buildings, and these are as unique as each building itself. Every building has its own specific reference building.
And as soon as you build differently (better) than the reference building, you are no longer building the reference building.
So there are KFW55 houses with higher energy consumption per square meter than some reference buildings in the Energy Saving Ordinance.
And as soon as you build differently (better) than the reference building, you are no longer building the reference building.
So there are KFW55 houses with higher energy consumption per square meter than some reference buildings in the Energy Saving Ordinance.
C
Christian NW29 Nov 2017 15:56I was hoping someone might have simply built a rectangular house according to the Energy Saving Ordinance. Just as a rough reference point. Whether the final energy consumption ends up at 50, 70, or even 100 kWh/(m2*a) (kWh/(ft²*year)) and thus falls into the green or more into the yellow range of the energy certificate. I’m not talking about architecturally special houses, but deliberately about a standard house without major features.
It would be great if that person happened to have built with Town & Country. But that’s not a must.
It would be great if that person happened to have built with Town & Country. But that’s not a must.