Smart Buildings
A University of Alberta multidisciplinary team engaged in research towards improving the planning, design, construction, operation, and maintenance of buildings, to increase occupant comfort and decrease energy consumption and costs.
Today’s buildings are complex cyber-physical systems, with a variety of sensors emitting data based on the building usage and controllers managing their heating, ventilation, air conditioning, lighting, major appliances, and access control systems. The impressive advances we have been witnessing in sensing and control technologies (under the general Internet of Things banner) coupled together with new machine-learning methods for modeling and predicting the behaviors of complex dynamic systems offer a timely and compelling opportunity for optimizing this sense-and-control loop, and consequently curtailing the substantial energy impact of buildings on the environment and substantially reducing their operation costs, while also improving the comfort of their occupants.
Team
Omid Ardakanian
Mustafa Gül
Ryan Li
Ioanis Nikolaidis
Eleni Stroulia
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Publications
News
Making solar-powered cities at the speed of light (May 2022)
“Crowd sensing” can lengthen the life of important infrastructure (March 2022)
Innovative company creates ‘synthetic cities’ to help solve future problems before they happen (Dec 2020)
AI could offer big energy savings for office towers, says U of A researcher ((Oct 2020)
Crossing the technology ‘valley of death’ (Oct 2020)
New housing projects aim to promote healthier living by design (May 2019)
Video: Powering new smart grid technologies (Jul 2016)
Keeping Canada’s transportation infrastructure on the rails (Aug 2015)
New Applied Public Health Chair to study community environments (Nov 2014)
Smart Condo? team shares collaborative teaching award (May 2011)