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Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Publicly accessible License 

The data from the Friends Center Building in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, come from a one-year study of 24 U.S. office occupants. These office occupants recorded a set of possible drivers of personal comfort and behavior over time by completing online daily surveys, which provided information on individual thermal comfort, preference, and behavior information with datalogger readings of the occupants? local thermal environments and control states. The surveys yielded 2,503 responses and tens of thousands of concurrent behavior and environment measurements. These data have been used to uncover links between the built environment, personal variables, and adaptive actions. The data contribute to international research collaborations focused on understanding the human-building interaction. This dataset could support the investigation of the mechanisms that drive the interaction between building occupants and their surrounding environments, which affect both energy use and environmental quality.

Citation Formats

Building Technologies Office (BTO). (2021). Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania [data set]. Retrieved from https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3351509.
Export Citation to RIS
Langevin, Jared, Luo, Na. Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. United States: N.p., 02 Nov, 2021. Web. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.3351509.
Langevin, Jared, Luo, Na. Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3351509
Langevin, Jared, Luo, Na. 2021. "Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania". United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3351509. /ds/hbi.
@div{oedi_4538, title = {Friends Center Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania}, author = {Langevin, Jared, Luo, Na.}, abstractNote = {The data from the Friends Center Building in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, come from a one-year study of 24 U.S. office occupants. These office occupants recorded a set of possible drivers of personal comfort and behavior over time by completing online daily surveys, which provided information on individual thermal comfort, preference, and behavior information with datalogger readings of the occupants? local thermal environments and control states. The surveys yielded 2,503 responses and tens of thousands of concurrent behavior and environment measurements. These data have been used to uncover links between the built environment, personal variables, and adaptive actions. The data contribute to international research collaborations focused on understanding the human-building interaction. This dataset could support the investigation of the mechanisms that drive the interaction between building occupants and their surrounding environments, which affect both energy use and environmental quality.}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3351509}, url = {/ds/hbi}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2021}, month = {11}}
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3351509

Details

Data from Nov 2, 2021

Last updated Nov 2, 2021

Submitted Nov 2, 2021

Organization

Building Technologies Office (BTO)

Contact

Na Luo

Authors

Jared Langevin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Na Luo

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Original Source

/ds/hbi

Keywords

DOE Project Details

Project Name Building Data Platform

Project Number 69035

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