Energy Conservation in Multifamily Housing: Review and Recommendations for
Retrofit Programs
John DeCicco, Loretta A. Smith, Rick Diamond, Rick Morgan, Janice
Debarros, Sandra Nolden, Theo Lubke, and Tom Wilson
Energy use in multifamily housing has long been identified as a particularly
challenging area for energy conservation efforts. Much work has
been done on technical and programmatic issues in the past decade.
There is now much experience in effective approaches for improving
multifamily housing energy efficiency, based on the efforts of private,
non-profit, utility, and governmental programs. A number of studies
covered issues particular to this sector in the early 1980s, guidelines
for multifamily housing audit and retrofit were developed, and aspects
of the topic were presented in previous ACEEE Summer Studies and
other forums. However, there has been no recent compilation of the
accumulated experience and lessons learned from more than a decade
of effort in the field.
This paper summarizes the findings of a project to review the state-of-the-art
regarding sector characteristics, issues and barriers, technology,
retrofit programs, financing, evaluation, and policy for implementing
energy conservation in multifamily housing. The full project results
will be published by ACEEE in early 1995 as a book on multifamily
energy conservation. Here we preview key results from that project,
with a focus on assessing the job yet to be done in improving multifamily
buildings nationwide and providing recommendations for programs,
policies and research needed to advance energy conservation in this
critical and challenging sector.
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15 pp., 1994, $11.00 A945