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Título
Electrical Consumption Profile Clusterization: Spanish Castilla y León Regional Health Services Building Stock as a Case Study
Autor
Facultad/Centro
Área de conocimiento
Título de la revista
Environments
Número de la revista
12
Cita Bibliográfica
de Simón-Martín, M., Blanes-Peiró, J. J., de la Puente-Gil, Á., González-Martínez, A., & Borge-Diez, D. (2018). Electrical consumption profile clusterization: Spanish Castilla y León regional health services building stock as a case study. Environments - MDPI, 5(12), 1-19. https://doi.org/10.3390/ENVIRONMENTS5120133
Editorial
MDPI
Fecha
2018-12-06
Resumen
[EN] Health Services building stock is usually the top energy consumer in the Administrative sector, by a considerable margin. Therefore, energy consumption supervision, prediction, and improvement should be carried out for this group in a preferential manner. Most prior studies in this field have characterized the energy consumption of buildings based on complex simulations, which tend to be limited by modelisation restrictions and assumptions. In this paper, an improved method for the clusterization of buildings based on their electrical energy consumption is proposed and, then, reference profiles are determined by examining the variation of energy consumption over the typical yearly consumption period. The temporary variation has been analyzed by evaluating the temporary evolution of the area consumption index through data mining and statistical clusterization techniques. The proposed methodology has been applied to building stock of the Health Services in the Castilla y León region in Spain, based on three years of historical monthly electrical energy consumption data for over 250 buildings. This building stock consists of hospitals, health centers (with and without emergency services) and a miscellaneous set of administrative and residential buildings. Results reveal five distinct electrical consumption profiles that have been associated with five reference buildings, permitting significant improvement in the demand estimation as compared to merely using the classical energy consumption indicators.
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SI
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