Review of Urban Building Energy Modeling (UBEM) Approaches, Methods and Tools using Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

How can city planners predict the energy needs of thousands of buildings at one?

This research reviews the urban building energy modeling as a possible solution, a methodology that allows for large-scale energy estimation and policy testing.

By performing a SWOT analysis on current tools, methods and approaches, the authors provide a clear guide for choosing between fast, data-drive predictions and detailed, physics-based simulations.

The study explicitly addresses the challenges of data scarcity and model complexity, proposing a universal framework to help energy policymakers maximize their impact.

The findings suggest that as urban population grow, urban building energy models will be indispensable for designing energy-efficient districts and achieving long-term climate resilience. For urban planners, this paper acts as a strategic manual for leveraging limited resources to create deep, sustainable building energy plans.

Learn more about this review here: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2021.111073


Reference

Ali, U., Shamsi, M. H., Hoare, C., Mangina, E., & O’Donnell, J. (2021). Review of urban building energy modeling (UBEM) approaches, methods and tools using qualitative and quantitative analysis. Energy and Buildings, 246, 111073