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Digital twins improve Glasgow University’s energy performance

IES digital twin of University of Glasgow
IES’s digital twin of the University of Glasgow.

Digital twins of three buildings at the University of Glasgow have been used to assess how compliance models can be used to improve building performance.

With funding from Innovate UK, a team comprising the University of Glasgow, net-zero technology specialist IES and HLM Architects created digital twins of the James McCune Smith Learning Hub (JMS), built in 2021, and the Advanced Research Centre (ARC), completed in 2022. A digital twin was also created of the university’s 55-year-old library.

Compliance models are created at the design stage to assess aspects such as energy performance and environmental rating. However, they cannot reliably predict real-world building performance in a useful way, according to IES. The project used compliance models for the three buildings at different stages of their lifecycle and created calibrated models. From those, it created the detailed digital twins.

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