presents green buildings & sustainable habitat : the … of new and renewable energy, goi griha...

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Ministry of New and Renewable

Energy, GoI

GRIHA Council Presents

Green buildings & sustainable habitat : The GRIHA way

The Energy and Resource Institute

Why green building?

Why rating?

Why GRIHA?

The 3 big questions???????????

1 2 3

Role of construction and buildings in development

Energy shortage of 2.1

per cent, or 24,077

million units (Mus)

48.8% population urban

by 2030

42% annual electricity

consumption attributed

to by buildings

Water and Waste: prevailing urban challenge

Water availability to

decrease by 15% per

capita 2020

Only 26% of estimated

domestic waste water

gets treated

42 million MT of solid

waste generated in urban

area daily

Challenges

• India has: – 2nd largest population

– 12th largest economy

– 70% population in rural areas

– Rapidly expanding urban areas

• Rising: – Energy consumption

– Associate GHG emissions

– Water consumption

– Unhandled waste

– Urban flooding

– Urban heat island effect

Policy response

• National Building Code • Energy Conservation Building Code • Appliance star labeling programme of BEE • Environmental Clearance/ EIA norms • Central Pollution Control Board guidelines • National Mission on Sustainable Habitats • Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission • Solar buildings programme for energy efficiency • Solar cities programme • Waste to energy programme

Lack of integration and uniformity and clarity on application domain (e.g ECBC does not talk about residential buildings); Environmental clearance is a nightmare for many builders; no integration between comfort standards of NBC and efficiency standards of ECBC, implementation challenges- govt works in silos

GRIHA compliant building: beyond ECBC

ECBC Compliance: •Insulation

•High Performance glass

•Controls

•Efficient electrical , mechanical and

lighting systems

Incremental cost: 15%

Payback period < 5 years

GRIHA Compliance: •ECBC +

•Passive principles (shading,

orientation, controlled glass area)

•Higher indoor design conditions

(higher by 1 deg C)

•Optimized lighting design

No further incremental cost

Payback period: < 4 years

37% 45%

kWhr/yr

Inception of GRIHA

• India’s first rated green building.

• Green building consultant – TERI (The Energy & Resource Institute)

• Project got LEED Platinum rating in 2001

• TERI GRIHA released in 2005

National and international endorsements

National rating system for green buildings in INDIA

– MNRE: 2007

Innovative tool to measure

greenness of buildings

– UN: 2009

India’s own green building rating

system

– UNFCC: 2015

Tool for implementing RE in building sector

‘The Climate Reality Project’ organization by

Mr. Al Gore : 2008

“Common Carbon Metric” (kWhr/sq

m/annum), for international

building energy

data UNEP : 2010

Which rating ??????

Residential

Commercial

Office

Institute

Bank

Museum

Airport

Industry

School Hospital

Hotel

Shopping complex

Restaurant

Sports complex

Dhaba

Multiple buildings typology

GRIHA variants

SVAGRIHA

Built-up area

100 – 2,499 m²

GRIHA

Built-up area

> 2,500 m²

GRIHA LD

Site area > 50 hectare

New construction

For existing building

GRIHA Prakriti Day Schools

GRIHA EB Existing building

Coming soon

Tool to facilitate design, construction, operation of a green building, and in turn ….measure “greenness” of a building in India

What gets measured gets managed

GRIHA

Green Rating for Integrated Habitat Assessment

Implementation

mechanisms

Design

Construction

Operation

Maintenance

GRIHA

Stages involved in project

Audit data to be submitted every 5

years

Registration

Orientation workshop

Site visit 1

Site visit 2

Documentation Submission

Site visit 3

External evaluation

Provisional Rating

Audit report

Final rating

Design

Construction

Operation Maintenance

Rating process

Versatility

All building types

All types of building

AC

Non AC

Hybrid

All climatic zones

Hot – Dry

Warm – Humid

Composite

Temperate

Cold

Non applicability clauses

Performance based

rating

Puts emphasis on Human Comfort – since that’s what

buildings are designed for!

Enhancing transparency and ease

• Web enabled GRIHA online tool for project documentation and evaluation

• GRIHA app: to enhance accessibility and one to

one connectivity between GRIHA and the project proponents

• Pre certification meetings through skype: to avoid

the extra financial burden of travelling and enhancing accessibility to the GRIHA Secretariat

Building capacity

• Project design charrettes

• GRIHA training programmes for Evaluators and Trainers

• Setting up Centers of Excellence

• Developing curriculum

Other benefits of aligning

with GRIHA

Obvious

Neglected

Energy Saving Water Saving Waste management

Economical Health Time management

Electricity and water security for customers: first choice for purchasing property!

Faster construction

Systematic operations on site

Minimal health related issues on site

“ Malaria outbreak avoided at a project site in Tirupati due to regular fumigation of labour hutment”

Faster hence cheaper

On a 200 crore Rupees project

One week delay = Loss of Rs. 45 Lakh

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Significant System downsizing

Tonnage of AC brought down from 1500 TR to 875

TR – Saving 6 crore Rupees

Station cum commercial complex for Delhi Metro Rail Corporation(16 hour /day use)

Lesser operational cost

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

Coolingdemand (TR)

Electricalload (kW)

Annualenergy

consumption(MWh)

Optimised system size in green buildings

Conventional case Efficient case

33% 41%

38%

Graph showing cost saving in terms of energy saving

Transparent- online processes

Online submission and evaluation of GRIHA documents- increasingly important due to the Real Estate Bill

Continuous handholding support…

• Continuous engagement: – Workshops for technical

staff

– Engagement on site for contractors/engineers

• Regional Secretariat presence in Pune, Mumbai, Bangaluru, Goa, Bhuvneshwar, Assam

GRIHA mobile phone app

…continuous handholding support

Examples of good practice

1. Tree protection

2. Mulching of top soil

3. Demarcation of construction area 4. Barricading along site

1 2

3 4

Detailed site visit reports are prepared and uploaded on the online panel. These

reports are refereed during final evaluation of the project

Sample site visit report

Facilitates compliance with policy

• Compliance with government policies and requirements

• Fast track MoEF clearance through precertification- meetings through Skype

Mechanisms for implementation • Upto 25% free FAR in Haryana for GRIHA rated buildings. • The Government of West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh has notified FAR incentive for GRIHA • CPWD Plinth Area Rates revised as per GRIHA norms/ benchmarks (DSR 2014) • CPWD Centre of Excellence on green buildings and GRIHA established at Ghaziabad • Minimum 3 Star for all Central Government and Public Sector Undertaking buildings

mandatory • Minimum 3 Star for all CPWD buildings mandatory • DDA, NBCC, BHEL have revised their tender documents to incorporate minimum 3 Star

GRIHA compliance • GRIHA pre certification accepted by MoEF for fast track environment clearance • Adopted by PWD, Government of Chandigarh, Assam, and Kerela • Adopted by the Cabinet of the Government of Delhi • Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC) &Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC)

Maharashtra gives financial incentives to developers (upto 50% rebate in premium) and occupants of GRIHA compliant projects (property tax rebate).

• NOIDA & Greater NOIDA Authority has notified FAR incentive for GRIHA 4 and 5 Star projects

• NBCC and OTDC have signed MoUs with TERI for GRIHA implementation in all upcoming projects

• The Government of Punjab has notified FAR incentive for GRIHA • Mandate by Sikkim government • State of Assam adopts GRIHA

Enhanced brand projection

“I congratulate TERI and the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Government of India on the development and implementation of GRIHA- the indigenous green building rating system of India. I hope that others would emulate and benefit from the examples set through GRIHA buildings”

GRIHA Rating awarded by Hon’ble President of India Shri Pranab Mukherjee

Impact of GRIHA

• Number of registered projects: 775

• Registered built up area >30 million sq m

• GRIHA & variants rated projects: 70

• Number of GRIHA pre certified projects: 70

Resource use optimisation

Social transformation

Market transformation

Green jobs

Synergies across policies and programmes to implement objectives

Enhancing capacities of stakeholders

Projection saving

10 million sqm of GRIHA 5 star

certified project can save

• Enough electricity to power

about 100,000 urban homes

• Enough water to meet needs of

22000 urban homes

• Monitored data to ensure

compliance

• 6MW PV installation to enhance

supply

How does GRIHA make a difference?

Before After

On site

After

How does GRIHA make a difference?

On site

Before

Co benefits: health, safety, reducing pollution loads

Workers working with stones or other such activities which involve a lot of dust, are to be given face masks as depicted here

Wheel washing facility at site entrance

Projects

CESE building IIT Kanpur – very little hard paved surfaces, lots of shading under trees

CESE building, two years after construction

CESE building IIT Kanpur – design and site planning respond to various site features like weaving the building around the trees, longest facades face north and south etc.

CESE building, IIT Kanpur

Panchakula, Haryana

Snapshot of the courtyard in HAREDA

HAREDA, Panchkula

INDIRA PARYAVARAN BHAWAN, 930 KWp Solar PV installation on site

Solar PV in elevation

Shaded atrium

Shaded roof

Solar PV on the roof

CIL, Kolkata

Site Area: Approx 9584.24m2

Built up Area: 4886.90 m2

Air-conditioned Area: 2629.93 m2

Non Air- conditioned Area: 2256.97 m2

Energy Performance Index (EPI): 89.16 KWh/

m2/year

Renewable Energy: Rated capacity of solar PV

installed on site is 22 KW

GRIHA provisional rating: 5 Stars

Year of completion: 2014 - 15

General Information

More than 80% of the regularly occupied spaces receive optimum daylight. The building is optimally oriented and façade is designed such that the heat gain is minimized and daylight is maximized.

• The landscape water demand has been reduced by minimizing the turf area, planting only indigenous species and using drip irrigation system for shrubs and trees.

• Building water use has been reduced by using low flow fixtures. • Phytorid technology based STP of 25 kLD capacity has been installed on site. 35 kL of storage tank

has been installed to collect rainwater for use in the building.

• Landscape has been designed to maximize green area and minimize hard paving. The net paved area is only 21.32% of landscape area.

• Fly ash has been extensively used in the project in RCC, mortar plaster and in the form of AAC blocks.

• Low energy materials such as unpolished stone and ceramic tiles have been used.

Location: Galtare, Wada, Thane, Maharashtra -

421303

Site Area: 70 acres

Built up Area: 2400.65 m2

Non Air- conditioned Area: 2400.65 m2

Energy Consumption Reduction: 57% reduction

compared to GRIHA benchmark

EPI: 42 KWh/ m2/year

Renewable Energy: 30KWp

GRIHA provisional rating: 5 Stars

Year of completion: …2012...

General Information

• Optimum window openings • Light floor for light diffusion • Soft landscape outside giving no reflected glare • Shaded walls and openings

• Buildings placed such that minimal trees are cut and agriculture is not impacted

• Buildings on hard ground to save on foundation cost . • Layout based on hydrogeological survey’s inputs so

that development does not impact negatively the recharge and discharge zones of water.

• Use of precast arch panels for roofs • Use of Stabilized Soil Cement blocks on walls and maintaining the same unplastered. • Double tile roofing for final roofs.

• CSEB based construction that has an embodied energy of 1% the regular construction(0.275MJ/Kg energy in CSEB wall and 72.3MJ)

• U-Block and arch lintels, CSEB arch panel roofs • Use of quarry dust to replace sand

• Solar Electric panels of 30KW capacity • Solar water heaters of 500L capacity • Biogas plant processing the food wastes & animal waste and producing 30cu.m gas • Recovering up to 95% of sewage water using a green sewage management

technology called Soil Biotechnology, which is used for landscaping.

Soil Bio-Technology at Govardhan Eco Village

• The civil cost was estimated around 750/sqft including brickwork. Additional expenses were floor finish, electrical, plumbing, bio-gas plant, furniture, kitchen equipment, solar water heater and solar power plant landscaping etc. Paint work was negligible as it is only done in some beams and some columns.

• Use of old bricks in construction.

LPD has come out as 3.9w/sqm for interior lighting including retail

www.grihaindia.org info@grihaindia.org

akashdeep@grihaindia.org

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