Luke,

I will give you 2 answers and they are both right, depending on circumstances.

1. In the back of my now out of print book, I had a simple fill-in-the-blank 
form to size solar pv systems. The first number you enter is how much money the 
client was willing to spend, then it works backwards to calculate what utility 
savings a system will produce per year based on the size of system that amount 
of money will buy.  We finally went this route because we would spend days and 
days sizing solar systems based clients saying something like "I want to 
off-set "X" percent of my monthly electric bill."  Of course this requires lots 
of data and calculations to produce this answer, then we would present the 
final system design to do exactly what the client asked for and the first thing 
they would say was "But we only can spend "X" dollars" which was usually about 
one-tenth what that size system would actually cost.

2. All LEEDS and almost every commercial and institutional building project 
requires a mechanical engineer to design the HVAC systems. 30 years ago this 
was done by hand using fill-in-the-blank heating and cooling zone load 
calculations. Then each calculated zone load sheet was grouped into each 
separate HVAC system so the duct sizes, heating and cooling coil sizing, and 
the central air handling units could then be sized.  Finally these we added 
together to size the central boilers and chillers.

Today all of this is done using computer software and every HVAC system 
engineer has this software. The most common are from Trane and Carrier, but 
there are other systems including add-ons that match to an Auto-Cad drawing 
file and uses the drawings showing the ductwork to calculate the duct sizes and 
bill of material lists without the engineer having to enter any actual data.  
Some can even calculate the exterior wall and window areas directly from the 
CAD drawings and use this as inout data for these HVAC loads programs.

Every building design funded by a state or federal government now also requires 
the HVAC engineer to calculate the projected energy usage for the building so 
the owners can consider which type of heating and cooling source results in the 
lowest operating costs.

Although we have been using energy analysis software for years like DOE-2 that 
can do this energy analysis as stand-alone, they require reams of data input, 
most the same as you would need to size the HVAC systems. For example, you 
would need to enter the area of each wall, window, door, roof, floor, and their 
compass orientation. For each device using electricity, you enter data for its 
operation. Got an elevator, you would need to enter its motor HP and how many 
hours it runs each day. These programs even allow you to enter the local 
utility rates so it can calculate the kW demand charges as well as kWh usage.  
Anyway, since much of this data (i.e. wall areas) have to be entered to size 
the HVAC systems, now most of these major HVAC programs can also produce this 
utility usage data. Since these programs use weather "tapes" for each specific 
geographic area, which has the temperature, humidity, sunshine, and other 
weather data for each 8,760 hour of the year for each location. This means if 
you do a good job of entering this data, you can get a fairly accurate estimate 
of future energy usage based on the occupancy hours, space temperatures, and 
outside weather conditions.

Contact the engineers who are designing and sizing the HVAC systems for this 
project and they will either be able to answer your energy usage questions, or 
they can give you a CD of all input data which can then be entered into your 
own software and do this yourself. However, don't be surprised if you have to 
go back to step #1 above!

Jeff Yago
DTI Solar

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