Rushil Desai
Username
Rushil Desai
Proposer First Name
Rushil
Proposer Email
rdesai@elementaengineering.com
Proposer Last Name
Desai
Boston 2021 Areas of Focus
Proposer Company/Organization
Elementa Engineering
Proposer Job Title
Building Performance Analyst
Proposed Session Description
In recent years, conversations regarding the design of high performance buildings have been a lot more holistic as we move towards performance metrics tracking a building's GHG emissions associated with grid connection. With the onset of legislation enforcing GHG intensity targets for different building types, there is a renewed emphasis on the cleanliness of the grid and how that affects a building's GHG emissions.
This session addresses several factors that need to be considered when designing to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions associated with building energy use in the form of a case study for a new construction office and public assembly building in the context of a grid region. The study explores the challenges of and techniques for "futureproofing" a building i.e. designing a building to meet targets established for two decades into the future. Moreover, the study investigates mechanisms for a high performance building to continue to meet the emissions targets established in the context of a changing grid given the uncertainty associated with the same.
Diversity and Inclusiveness
One of the speakers is an emerging professional.
Learning Objectives
Understand why carbon as a metric differs from other benchmarking/performance metrics such as energy and cost.
Reevaluate the method of accounting for a building's carbon footprint associated with electricity drawn from the grid.
Understand why building design, operations, and carbon accounting would need to evolve in the context of a rapidly changing grid.
Identify why and how policy measures would need to evolve to meet the demands of grid-connected carbon neutral buildings.
Has this session been presented before?
No
Target Audiences Level of Expertise
Level 2 - Some prior knowledge helpful.
Recommended Length
60-minute session
30-minute session
Strongest Content Connection - Boston 2021
Comments about your speaker roster
Shreshth’s professional focus over the past fifteen years has been to understand and model building performance that results from the interaction between envelope configuration, climatic context, functional requirements, conditioning systems, and occupant behavior. More recently, his doctoral research focused on developing automated workflows to construct living urban energy models that are designed to systematically explore future energy scenarios and identify areas of maximum potential savings. Shreshth’s role is primarily to manage the holistic environmental design scope, and work closely with the project teams to shape building and urban designs from the concept phase through implementation. He especially enjoys working on projects with a focus on designing with passive strategies for thermal and visual comfort; and has completed specialized building-physics analyses to help inform design decisions of several award-winning projects that represent a broad spectrum of types, scales, climates, and performance goals.
As a Building Performance Analyst at Elementa Engineering, Rushil is interested in net zero energy, building to grid interoperability, carbon management strategies, and post-occupancy measurement & verification. He brings expertise resulting from a diverse set of experiences in data-driven energy analysis, urban energy modeling, and building performance modeling. He holds hold a B.Tech. and M.Tech. in Energy Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, and an M.S. in Energy Science, Technology & Policy with a concentration in Civil & Environmental Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University.
Reviewer 1
Cater, James
Reviewer 2
Roth, Kurt
Proposal #
153
Committee Decision
Being Considered
Presenters
Full Description
The session addresses the need to adopt more advanced metrics when evaluating the operational performance of buildings. It discusses a design process that involves understanding how a 'net zero' building fits into a grid with high renewable energy penetration, and how designers can address the challenges of future-proofing a building in light of the uncertainty associated with a rapidly changing grid.