[Article] Multi-criteria decision support framework for climate change-sensitive thermal comfort evaluation in European buildings
Most building comfort assessments still answer yesterday’s question: Is this building comfortable today?
But heat waves, climate drift, and extreme years demand a different one: 👉 Will this building remain habitable under future climate stress?
Our recent paper in Energy & Buildings introduces a multi-criteria decision support framework designed exactly for this challenge: “Multi-criteria decision support framework for climate change-sensitive thermal comfort evaluation in European buildings.”
🧩 What makes this framework different?
Instead of relying on a single comfort metric or a fixed temperature threshold, the framework connects four dimensions that are usually treated separately:
1️⃣ Building context: From hospitals and senior housing to renovated and post-war dwellings.
2️⃣ Operation mode: Free-running, mixed-mode, or mechanically cooled buildings.
3️⃣ Climate sensitivity: Explicitly accounting for heat waves and future climate scenarios, not only typical years.
4️⃣ Time-integrated performance indicators: Including indoor overheating degree, ambient warmness degree, climate-change overheating resistivity, hours of exceedance, and effective temperature.
The result is a decision logic, not a score. A framework that helps answer what matters, when, and for whom.
🏙️ Why this matters beyond academia
1. Designers gain a structured way to test whether passive and active strategies remain effective under future heat waves.
- Engineers can compare comfort outcomes across building types and climates using consistent indicators.
- Policymakers finally get a tool aligned with climate adaptation goals, not just energy efficiency targets.
The case study shows that even high-performance buildings can experience sharp increases in overheating risk toward 2100, underlining why comfort evaluation must evolve with the climate.
📄 Read the paper: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2023.113804
👥 Authors & institutions to follow: Deepak Amaripadath (Arizona State University), Ronnen Levinson (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Rajan Rawal (CEPT University), Shady Attia (University of Liège)
📚 Learn more about our research: https://www.sbd.uliege.be/
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