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Gómez-Chaparro, M, García-Sanz-Calcedo, J and Aunión-Villa, J (2020) Maintenance in hospitals with less than 200 beds: efficiency indicators. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 526–37.

Gao, S, Jin, R and Lu, W (2020) Design for manufacture and assembly in construction: a review. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 538–50.

Gao, X and Pishdad-Bozorgi, P (2020) A framework of developing machine learning models for facility life-cycle cost analysis. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 501–25.

Glew, D, Johnston, D, Miles-Shenton, D and Thomas, F (2020) Retrofitting suspended timber ground-floors; comparing aggregated and disaggregated evaluation methods. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 572–86.

Nardecchia, F, Mattoni, B, Burattini, C and Bisegna, F (2020) The impact of humidity on vortex creation around isolated buildings. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 551–71.

Patel, H and Green, S D (2020) Beyond the performance gap: reclaiming building appraisal through archival research. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 469–84.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: Archival methods; building evaluation; building performance; environmental determinism; performance gap; post-occupancy evaluation (POE);
  • ISBN/ISSN: 0961-3218
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/09613218.2019.1672517
  • Abstract:
    Current debates about building performance evaluation often emphasize the ‘performance gap’ between how buildings perform in practice and how performance was envisaged during the design stage. While such debates continue to be dominated by energy considerations, increasing attention is directed towards the subjective experiences of building users in terms of thermal comfort and wellbeing. The latter trends are undoubtedly to be welcomed, but buildings continue to be conceptualized as fixed physical objects rather than entities that are enacted in practice. With the aim of challenging current assumptions, research is described which sought to reclaim the concept of building appraisal as practised by the pioneering architectural practice DEGW. The concept of building appraisal differs from current notions of building performance evaluation in that the point of departure is not the supposedly fixed entity of the building, but the essential fluidity of the occupying organization and their aspirations in terms of space. Empirical data are derived from archival sources and through extensive interaction with the DEGW diaspora, many of whom remain active at the leading edge of international practice. It is concluded that the continued fixation with the ‘performance gap’ reinforces long-since discredited assumptions of environmental determinism.

Pereira, P F, Ramos, N M M and Simões, M L (2020) Data-driven occupant actions prediction to achieve an intelligent building. Building Research & Information, 48(05), 485–500.