BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL

High land costs and shortage of accessible urban areas are some of the leading causes for the construction of highly dense high-rise structures. As a result, undesired low wind speeds that are generated due to excessive shielding contribute to heat stress issue. Recent studies have investigated the...

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Main Authors: Nazim N.M., Hanipah M.H., Zakaria M.A., Jusoh W.A.W., Yunus R., Osman M.H., Rahman M.F.A., Jeni M.L.A., Yazid M.N.A.W.M., Ramli M.Z.
Other Authors: 58895913100
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Published: Construction Research Institute of Malaysia 2024
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-344012024-10-14T11:19:32Z BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL Nazim N.M. Hanipah M.H. Zakaria M.A. Jusoh W.A.W. Yunus R. Osman M.H. Rahman M.F.A. Jeni M.L.A. Yazid M.N.A.W.M. Ramli M.Z. 58895913100 57188734051 57111702000 57205566536 57204301298 57193312434 57212406625 56181351600 56755896900 57195984780 Building Opening Heights Multiple Buildings Pedestrian-Level Wind Speed High land costs and shortage of accessible urban areas are some of the leading causes for the construction of highly dense high-rise structures. As a result, undesired low wind speeds that are generated due to excessive shielding contribute to heat stress issue. Recent studies have investigated the impacts of building opening in both subtropical and tropical climate zones as a popular architectural element to yield adequate ventilation around buildings. Nevertheless, only a handful of studies have examined building opening in any systematic way especially on wind speed at pedestrian-level for multiple buildings area. As such, this study assessed the effect of different building opening heights (BOHs) on pedestrian-level wind speed at multiple buildings area. The mean value for wind velocity ratio (MVR) was calculated by using data obtained from computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. The study outcomes revealed that the optimum opening height at a range of 42%-64% generated the highest MVR = 0.39. In addition, the building opening elevation above than 86% of average building height has no longer affect the pedestrian level wind speed. In conclusion, the study findings provide evidence that optimum building opening design can effectively increase the mean value of wind speed at pedestrian level. � 2023, Construction Research Institute of Malaysia. All rights reserved. Final 2024-10-14T03:19:31Z 2024-10-14T03:19:31Z 2023 Article 2-s2.0-85185507917 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85185507917&partnerID=40&md5=311e43fb179809d3bc49dac35132370e https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/34401 41 3 59 66 Construction Research Institute of Malaysia Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
topic Building Opening Heights
Multiple Buildings
Pedestrian-Level
Wind Speed
spellingShingle Building Opening Heights
Multiple Buildings
Pedestrian-Level
Wind Speed
Nazim N.M.
Hanipah M.H.
Zakaria M.A.
Jusoh W.A.W.
Yunus R.
Osman M.H.
Rahman M.F.A.
Jeni M.L.A.
Yazid M.N.A.W.M.
Ramli M.Z.
BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
description High land costs and shortage of accessible urban areas are some of the leading causes for the construction of highly dense high-rise structures. As a result, undesired low wind speeds that are generated due to excessive shielding contribute to heat stress issue. Recent studies have investigated the impacts of building opening in both subtropical and tropical climate zones as a popular architectural element to yield adequate ventilation around buildings. Nevertheless, only a handful of studies have examined building opening in any systematic way especially on wind speed at pedestrian-level for multiple buildings area. As such, this study assessed the effect of different building opening heights (BOHs) on pedestrian-level wind speed at multiple buildings area. The mean value for wind velocity ratio (MVR) was calculated by using data obtained from computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. The study outcomes revealed that the optimum opening height at a range of 42%-64% generated the highest MVR = 0.39. In addition, the building opening elevation above than 86% of average building height has no longer affect the pedestrian level wind speed. In conclusion, the study findings provide evidence that optimum building opening design can effectively increase the mean value of wind speed at pedestrian level. � 2023, Construction Research Institute of Malaysia. All rights reserved.
author2 58895913100
author_facet 58895913100
Nazim N.M.
Hanipah M.H.
Zakaria M.A.
Jusoh W.A.W.
Yunus R.
Osman M.H.
Rahman M.F.A.
Jeni M.L.A.
Yazid M.N.A.W.M.
Ramli M.Z.
format Article
author Nazim N.M.
Hanipah M.H.
Zakaria M.A.
Jusoh W.A.W.
Yunus R.
Osman M.H.
Rahman M.F.A.
Jeni M.L.A.
Yazid M.N.A.W.M.
Ramli M.Z.
author_sort Nazim N.M.
title BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
title_short BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
title_full BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
title_fullStr BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
title_full_unstemmed BUILDING OPENING MODIFICATIONS AFFECTING WIND SPEED AT PEDESTRIAN LEVEL
title_sort building opening modifications affecting wind speed at pedestrian level
publisher Construction Research Institute of Malaysia
publishDate 2024
_version_ 1814061119835209728
score 13.214268