Evaluating Energy Efficiency in a Hospital Building with Reference to GRIHA: Case of Trauma Centre at Aligarh, India

Journal: Architecture Engineering and Science DOI: 10.32629/aes.v3i2.843

Apoorva Dubey1, Mohammad Arif Kamal2

1. Dept. of Architecture, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India
2. Architecture Section, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India

Abstract

With the rise in problems mainly ecological as well as energy crises that are intensifying today, the concept of green has become essential concerning sustainable development. The hospital building consumes much more energy and generates more waste, as compared to the other types of buildings. The climate change, contamination of chemicals, and use of unsustainable resources are all making health worse day by day over the world. The health sectors are themselves causing these problems on a broad scale. So, hospitals, health sectors must be green, there must be proper management of resources, waste etc., which means that it must have a minimum negative impact on the environment. The term Green Hospital has evolved as a way of addressing environmental issues, overcoming them and meeting society’s need. In India, Green Rating for Integrated Habitat Assessment (GRIHA) is one of the tools that provides green building certification to hospital buildings also. This paper aims at analyzing and investigating a hospital building (Trauma centre), Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, Aligarh, based on major criteria of the GRIHA variant for existing buildings. This hospital building had been provisionally-rated by GRIHA in the year 2016 as 3 stars. This paper includes the analysis of building based on various calculations and in depth study of how this 3 star rating was provisionally achieved. This paper involves two main calculations, one regarding peak heat gain and the other is EPI.

Keywords

green hospital, Trauma Centre, GRIHA, peak heat gain, EPI, Aligarh, India

References

[1]Sahamir S & Zakaria R. (2014). Green assessment criteria for public hospital building Development in Malaysia. 4th International Conference on Sustainable Future for Human Security, 106–115.
[2]Azar F E, Farzianpour F, Foroushani A R, et .al. (2015). Evaluation of green hospital dimensions in teaching and private hospitals covered by tehran university of medical sciences. Journal of Service Science and Management, 2015, 8, 259-266. http://www.scirp.org/journal/jssmhttp://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jssm.2015.82029.
[3]The green checklist and discussion guide, n.d. section III, 1-35.
[4]Technical bulletin green hospitals, n.d. Indian green building council, CII-sohrabji godrej green business centre,1-4.
[5]Kumari S & Kumar R. (2020).Green hospital- A necessity and not option. Journal of management research and analysis, doi: 10.18231/j.jmra.2020.010. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/342958633.
[6]Tabish S.A. (2011). Future trends in green hospitals. Research gate, 1-12. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/303365580.
[7]Dhillon V.S, Kaur D. (2015). Green hospital and climate change: their interrelationship and the way forward. Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research, Vol-9(12): LE01-LE05.
[8]Gultom M and Riyanto S, n.d. Green human resource management: strategies to enhance green behaviour of hospital. 1-11.
[9]Rani S, Choudhary Y, Mahal N.K, et.al.(2017). Transforming existing buildings to sustainable buildings. GRIHA for existing buildings abridged manual, version 1, 14-19.
[10] Chias P and Abad T. (2017). Green hospitals, green healthcare. International Journal of Energy Production & Management, Vol. 2, No. 2, 196–205.

Copyright © 2022 Apoorva Dubey, Mohammad Arif Kamal

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License