Article ID: | iaor20071864 |
Country: | Netherlands |
Volume: | 20 |
Issue: | 4 |
Start Page Number: | 363 |
End Page Number: | 378 |
Publication Date: | Oct 2006 |
Journal: | Advanced Engineering Informatics |
Authors: | Wang Weimin, Rivard Hugues, Zmeureanu Radu |
Keywords: | heuristics: genetic algorithms |
Shape is an important consideration in green building design due to its significant impact on energy performance and construction costs. This paper presents a methodology to optimize building shapes in plan using the genetic algorithm. The building footprint is represented by a multi-sided polygon. Different geometrical representations for a polygon are considered and evaluated in terms of their potential problems such as epistasis, which occurs when one gene pair masks or modifies the expression of other gene pairs, and encoding isomorphism, which occurs when chromosomes with different binary strings map to the same solution in the design space. Two alternative representations are compared in terms of their impact on computational effectiveness and efficiency. An optimization model is established considering the shape-related variables and several other envelope-related design variables such as window ratios and overhangs. Life-cycle cost and life-cycle environmental impact are the two objective functions used to evaluate the performance of a green building design. A case study is presented where the shape of a typical floor of an office building defined by a pentagon is optimized with a multi-objective genetic algorithm.