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Commissioning Process Important in
LEEDing by Design
By George Bourassa, senior vice
president and national director of commissioning services
with the Fort Worth office of Carter & Burgess Inc.
A prerequisite for LEED certification,
the commissioning process verifies that building systems are
installed and operated at their maximum levels of efficiency.
These days so many experts are involved
in building design and construction that no single firm or
individual can perform oversight of the entire process. The
commissioning provider fulfills this role, verifying that
systems are installed properly and that the owner's design
intent is realized through rigorous and extensive functional-performance
testing of systems, interfaces and all possible sequences
of operation. One reason to incorporate commissioning in project
delivery is the desire to obtain certification through the
U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design program. LEED quantifies and certifies "green"
buildings that are environmentally friendly and sustainable.
The Green Building Council first adopted the LEED standard
in an attempt to eliminate "green washing"-making
unsubstantiated claims about the energy efficiency or environmental
friendliness of a building. All LEED-approved buildings achieve
a high level of energy efficiency and limit their negative
impact on the environment. A green building might use highly
efficient power and lighting systems, recycled rainwater for
irrigation, vegetation to shade sunny walls or recycled or
renewable sources for building materials.
Fundamentally, commissioning involves three elements: record
documentation, systems-functional-performance verification
and operator training. Progress on all three should be ongoing
throughout a project. Many owners consider commissioning the
last step after construction and before occupancy, but that
is a misconception. Ideally, commissioning should begin when
a building is in the early schematic design phase.
The commissioning team operates as the owner's advocate throughout
the design process, first working with the owner to understand
and document the project requirements and then performing
design reviews to ensure those requirements are reflected
in the design solutions. The team also looks for possible
conflicts related to system testing or maintenance.
During construction, the commissioning team continues to
ensure the owner's requirements are realized. The team works
closely with contractors to integrate commissioning activities
into the overall construction schedule, to keep commissioning
activities off the critical path and to carry out site inspections
with a focus on systems operations and maintenance.
During functional performance testing and operator training,
the commissioning team moves to the forefront. The team verifies
the performance of building systems based on detailed test
procedures, which they have developed, and determines the
most efficient equipment settings. The team also supervises
equipment for training operations staff and organizes warranty
information. Ultimately, the team prepares extensive documentation
on systems, including benchmarks for energy use and equipment
efficiencies, seasonal operational issues, start-up and shutdown
procedures, diagnostic tools and guidelines for energy accounting.
Commissioning costs can range widely depending on the scope
of services provided. In general, the range is about .125
percent to 2.5 percent of construction costs.
Payback can be significant. Organizations that have researched
commissioning claim that owners can achieve savings in operations
of $4 over the first five years of occupancy as a direct result
of every $1 invested in commissioning-an excellent return
on investment.
Commissioning specialists recommend that owners not think
of commissioning as ending at completion or warranty expiration.
Owners benefit most when it is a seamless process that begins
in the design phase and transitions into permanent facility
management. "Continuous commissioning" efforts can
also be adopted to monitor system operations and provide for
"persistence" in maintaining targeted energy consumption
levels and highly reliable system performance.
During construction, it is important to pay close attention
to the reports submitted by the commissioning provider to
ensure that the design intent isn't being compromised by value
engineering decisions or change orders. Critical to the success
of any commissioning process is the buy-in of all members
of the project team. The commissioning team doesn't have a
contractual relationship with the architect, engineers or
contractors, so it is essential that the owner communicate
from the beginning their commitment to the process.
Often the true measure of how well the commissioning process
works is reflected in the level of cooperation among the architects,
engineers, contractors and the commissioning provider. Most
often, the commissioning provider needs to educate project
team members on the benefits of commissioning and to lead
the project team in understanding the owner's project requirements
and maintaining a clear focus on achieving the quality component
inherent in these requirements.
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