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Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
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Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
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Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East

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Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
Journal Article

Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East

2025
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Overview
This study investigates the effectiveness of passive design in low-rise residential buildings located in arid desert climates, using the Dubai Solar Decathlon Middle East (SDME) competition as a case study. This full-scale experiment offers a unique opportunity to evaluate design solutions under controlled, realistic conditions; prescriptive, modeled performance; and monitored performance assessments. The prescriptive assessment reviews geometry, orientation, envelope thermal properties, and shading. Most houses adopt compact forms, with envelope-to-volume and envelope-to-floor area ratios averaging 1 and 3.7, respectively, and window-to-wall ratios of approximately 17%, favoring north-facing openings to optimize daylight while reducing heat gain. Shading is strategically applied, horizontal on south façades and vertical on east and west. The thermal properties significantly exceed the local code requirements, with wall performance up to 80% better than that mandated. The modeled assessment uses Building Energy Models (BEMs) to simulate the impact of prescriptive measures on energy performance. Three variations are applied: assigning minimum local code requirements to all the houses to isolate the geometry (baseline); removing shading; and applying actual envelope properties. Geometry alone accounts for up to 60% of the variation in cooling intensity; shading reduces loads by 6.5%, and enhanced envelopes lower demand by 14%. The monitored assessment uses contest-period data. Indoor temperatures remain stable (22–25 °C) despite outdoor fluctuations. Energy use confirms that houses with good designs and airtightness have lower cooling loads. Airtightness varies widely (avg. 14.5 m3/h/m2), with some well-designed houses underperforming due to construction flaws. These findings highlight the critical role of passive design as the first layer for improving the energy performance of the built environment and advancing toward net-zero targets, specifically in arid desert climates.