Major new metropolitan centers experience challenges during management of peak electrical loads, typically occurring during extreme summer events. These peak loads expose the reliability of the electrical grid on the production and transmission side, while customers may incur considerable charges from increased metered peak demand, failing to meet demand response program obligations, or both. These challenges create a need for analytical tools that can inform building managers and utilities about near future conditions so they are better able to avoid peak demand charges and reduce building operational costs. In this article, we report on a tool and methodology to forecast peak loads at the city scale using New York City (NYC) as a test case. The city of New York experiences peak electric demand loads that reach up to 11 GW during the summertime, and are projected to increase to over 12 GW by 2025, as reported by the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO). The energy forecast is based on the Weather Research and Forecast (WRF) model version 3.5, coupled with a multilayer building energy model (BEM). Urban morphology parameters are assimilated from the New York Primary Land Use Tax-Lot Output (PLUTO), while the weather component of the model is initialized daily from the North American Mesoscale (NAM) model. A city-scale analysis is centered in the summer months of June–July 2015 which included an extreme heat event (i.e., heat wave). The 24-h city-scale weather and energy forecasts show good agreement with the archived data from both weather stations records and energy records by NYISO. This work also presents an exploration of space cooling savings from the use of white roofs as an application of the city-scale energy demand model.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
February 2017
Research-Article
Forecasting Building Energy Demands With a Coupled Weather-Building Energy Model in a Dense Urban Environment
Luis E. Ortiz,
Luis E. Ortiz
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: lortiz10@citymail.cuny.edu
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: lortiz10@citymail.cuny.edu
Search for other works by this author on:
Jorge E. Gonzalez,
Jorge E. Gonzalez
NOAA-Crest Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
Fellow ASME
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: jgonzalezcruz@ccny.cuny.edu
Engineering
Fellow ASME
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: jgonzalezcruz@ccny.cuny.edu
Search for other works by this author on:
Estatio Gutierrez,
Estatio Gutierrez
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: estatio@yahoo.com
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: estatio@yahoo.com
Search for other works by this author on:
Mark Arend
Mark Arend
Electrical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: marend@ccny.cuny.edu
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: marend@ccny.cuny.edu
Search for other works by this author on:
Luis E. Ortiz
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: lortiz10@citymail.cuny.edu
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: lortiz10@citymail.cuny.edu
Jorge E. Gonzalez
NOAA-Crest Professor of Mechanical
Engineering
Fellow ASME
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: jgonzalezcruz@ccny.cuny.edu
Engineering
Fellow ASME
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: jgonzalezcruz@ccny.cuny.edu
Estatio Gutierrez
Mechanical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: estatio@yahoo.com
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: estatio@yahoo.com
Mark Arend
Electrical Engineering Department,
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: marend@ccny.cuny.edu
The City College of New York,
160 Convent Avenue,
New York, NY 10031
e-mail: marend@ccny.cuny.edu
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Solar Energy Division of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF SOLAR ENERGY ENGINEERING: INCLUDING WIND ENERGY AND BUILDING ENERGY CONSERVATION. Manuscript received April 29, 2016; final manuscript received September 14, 2016; published online November 10, 2016. Assoc. Editor: Patrick E. Phelan.
J. Sol. Energy Eng. Feb 2017, 139(1): 011002 (8 pages)
Published Online: November 10, 2016
Article history
Received:
April 29, 2016
Revised:
September 14, 2016
Citation
Ortiz, L. E., Gonzalez, J. E., Gutierrez, E., and Arend, M. (November 10, 2016). "Forecasting Building Energy Demands With a Coupled Weather-Building Energy Model in a Dense Urban Environment." ASME. J. Sol. Energy Eng. February 2017; 139(1): 011002. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4034909
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Numerical Investigations on Minimization of Convective Heat Losses From Hemispherical Cavity Receiver Using Air Curtain
J. Sol. Energy Eng (June 2025)
Related Articles
Mitigation Options to Reduce Peak Air Temperature and Air-Conditioning Demand in the Context of a Warming Climate for a Tropical Coastal City
J. Eng. Sustain. Bldgs. Cities (May,2021)
On the Spatio-Temporal End-User Energy Demands of a Dense Urban Environment
J. Sol. Energy Eng (August,2017)
Effects of Rooftop Photovoltaics on Building Cooling Demand and Sensible Heat Flux Into the Environment for an Installation on a White Roof
J. Eng. Sustain. Bldgs. Cities (May,2020)
A New Methodology to Assess Building Integrated Roof Top Photovoltaic Installations at City Scales: The Tropical Coastal City Case
J. Eng. Sustain. Bldgs. Cities (February,2020)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Dynamic Cool Roofing Systems
Advanced Energy Efficient Building Envelope Systems
Front Matter
Roofing Research and Standards Development: 10th Volume
Renewal and Sustainable Development of Urban Hospital Buildings: Exemplified by the Architectural Design of Chengdu New Century Women & Children’s Hospital
International Conference on Green Buildings and Optimization Design (GBOD 2012)