TY - CPAPER AU - Norman Bourassa AU - Mary Ann Piette AU - Naoya Motegi AB -

Commercial Building Retrocommissioning activity has increased in recent years. This paper discusses LBNL's recently conducted study of 8 participants in the Sacramento Municipal Utility District Retrocommissioning program. We evaluated the persistence of energy savings and measure implementation, in an effort to identify and understand factors that can improve the longevity of retrocommissioning benefits. The LBNL analysis included a whole-building and measure status analysis, incorporating elements of previous work by Texas A&M University and Portland Energy Conservation Inc. Included in the energy analysis were whole building calculated energy savings and consideration of effects from the 2001 energy crisis. The measure persistence analysis examined each recommended measure and it's current operational status. Results showed a 59% implementation rate of recommended measures. Some process findings were: - Building engineers will tweak a measure that didn't work, instead of reverting to the pre-retrocommissioning settings - A majority of the implementation costs were absorbed into regular operation and maintenance budgets - The most frequently reported down side was the large time demands on the building engineering staff. However, all respondents thought it was worth the price. - All the sites said that retrocommissioning is beneficial to their operations, due to on-going training and continuous improvement of system specifications - Approximately 65% of the peak retrocommissioning savings persisted beyond four years

BT - Proceedings of the 12th National Conference on Building Commissioning C2 - LBNL-54985 C4 -

May 18-20, 2004

C5 -

CD

C6 -

Commercial Building Systems

C7 -

y

CN - LBNL-54985 CY - Atlanta, GA DA - 05/2004 LA - eng N2 -

Commercial Building Retrocommissioning activity has increased in recent years. This paper discusses LBNL's recently conducted study of 8 participants in the Sacramento Municipal Utility District Retrocommissioning program. We evaluated the persistence of energy savings and measure implementation, in an effort to identify and understand factors that can improve the longevity of retrocommissioning benefits. The LBNL analysis included a whole-building and measure status analysis, incorporating elements of previous work by Texas A&M University and Portland Energy Conservation Inc. Included in the energy analysis were whole building calculated energy savings and consideration of effects from the 2001 energy crisis. The measure persistence analysis examined each recommended measure and it's current operational status. Results showed a 59% implementation rate of recommended measures. Some process findings were: - Building engineers will tweak a measure that didn't work, instead of reverting to the pre-retrocommissioning settings - A majority of the implementation costs were absorbed into regular operation and maintenance budgets - The most frequently reported down side was the large time demands on the building engineering staff. However, all respondents thought it was worth the price. - All the sites said that retrocommissioning is beneficial to their operations, due to on-going training and continuous improvement of system specifications - Approximately 65% of the peak retrocommissioning savings persisted beyond four years

PP - Atlanta, GA PY - 2004 T2 - Proceedings of the 12th National Conference on Building Commissioning T3 - 12th National Conference on Building Commissioning TI - Evaluation of Retrocommissioning Persistence in Large Commercial Buildings ER -