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Energy Efficiency and Renewable Integration in Sustainable Buildings

A special issue of Energies (ISSN 1996-1073). This special issue belongs to the section "G: Energy and Buildings".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 15 July 2026 | Viewed by 1116

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Department of Agriculture, Forests, Nature and Energy (DAFNE), University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy
Interests: rural buildings; livestock buildings; storage and processing buildings; microclimate control; greenhouses; photovoltaic greenhouses; sustainable agriculture
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Department of Agriculture, Forests, Nature and Energy (DAFNE), University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy
Interests: sustainability; built and architecture; life cycle; life cycle assessment; architecture design; sustainable architecture; urban planning; urban design; urban scale; rural buildings; agricultural land planning; agricultural buildings
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The integration of renewable energy sources in buildings and, more broadly, the growing demand for architectural eco-efficiency have become central issues within the context of the global energy transition. The construction sector continues to account for a significant share of overall energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, making it necessary to adopt effective strategies aimed at reducing energy demand and supporting the ongoing transition toward more sustainable development models, in line with major international decarbonization policies.

Within this framework, recent research highlights how building eco-efficiency requires a fully integrated approach, capable of coordinating envelope design, technological innovation in materials, the integration of building services, and advanced strategies for performance control and management, according to a coherent and environmentally conscious perspective. Buildings therefore represent the primary unit of analysis and experimentation, within which architectural and technological decisions directly influence energy performance, indoor environmental quality, and on-site energy production, also drawing on experimental models derived from different disciplinary fields.

From this perspective, eco-efficiency should be understood as an integral part of the design process, capable of informing and guiding decisions from the earliest conceptual stages, rather than as the inductive outcome of retrofit operations implemented a posteriori. This process-oriented interpretation of sustainability reflects a consolidated theoretical framework in which technology plays a structuring role within contemporary architectural practice.

Alongside new construction, increasing attention is being devoted to the energy retrofitting of the existing building stock, addressed not only at the scale of individual buildings but also at the urban scale, in response to the transformation needs affecting contemporary cities. Energy renovation and renewable energy integration offer significant opportunities to reduce energy consumption and emissions in existing buildings, including those of historical value or located in sensitive contexts, through compatible, reversible, and replicable solutions. When systematically applied, such strategies can contribute to the development of repeatable models at the urban scale, supporting sustainable energy behavior in response to the growing demand for urban eco-efficiency.

In this context, tools such as energy audits, energy modeling and simulation, in-operation performance monitoring, and life cycle assessment (LCA) play a fundamental role in evaluating the effectiveness of interventions and supporting design decisions. At the same time, the application of Artificial Intelligence opens new perspectives for data analysis, performance optimization, and decision-support processes, fostering the development of innovative, verifiable, and transferable solutions.

This Special Issue aims to collect scientific contributions addressing energy efficiency and renewable energy integration in sustainable buildings, highlighting approaches, methods, and applications capable of providing concrete, replicable, and innovative responses to the challenges posed by the energy transition.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Energy efficiency strategies in buildings.
  • Integration of renewable energy systems at the building scale.
  • Passive and active solutions for low-energy buildings.
  • Building envelope design and energy systems.
  • Energy retrofit and renovation of existing buildings.
  • Technological innovation and renewable integration in historic buildings and sensitive contexts.
  • Replicable energy solutions and applications at the urban scale.
  • Energy audits, modeling, simulation, and performance monitoring.
  • Life cycle assessment (LCA) applied to buildings.
  • Applications of Artificial Intelligence for energy optimization in the built environment.
  • Nearly zero-energy and positive-energy buildings.

Prof. Dr. Alvaro Marucci
Dr. Stefano Bigiotti
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a single-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Energies is an international peer-reviewed open access semimonthly journal published by MDPI.

Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 2600 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.

Keywords

  • building energy efficiency
  • sustainable architecture
  • green buildings
  • building energy management
  • net-zero energy buildings
  • technological integration and energy supply
  • bio-building and architectural detail design
  • active and passive energy conversion strategies
  • energy audit and retrofitting
  • sustainable planning
  • green urbanism
  • LCA processes and sustainable energy development

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

15 pages, 2629 KB  
Article
Three-Dimensional Transient Thermal Analysis of BIPV Roof Systems with Passive Cooling Fins Under Real Climatic Conditions
by Juan Pablo De-Dios-Jiménez, Germán Pérez-Hernández, Rafael Torres-Ricárdez, Reymundo Ramírez-Betancour, Jesús López-Gómez, Jessica De-Dios-Suárez and Brayan Leonardo Pérez-Escobar
Energies 2026, 19(9), 2056; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19092056 - 24 Apr 2026
Viewed by 839
Abstract
This paper describes the thermal and energy performance of three roof configurations: a conventional concrete slab, a BIPV system, and a BIPV system equipped with passive aluminum fins. Three-dimensional transient finite element simulations were carried out under field-measured 24 h meteorological boundary conditions [...] Read more.
This paper describes the thermal and energy performance of three roof configurations: a conventional concrete slab, a BIPV system, and a BIPV system equipped with passive aluminum fins. Three-dimensional transient finite element simulations were carried out under field-measured 24 h meteorological boundary conditions characteristic of hot climates. The objective of this study is to quantify the impact of PV integration and passive cooling strategies on heat transfer behavior and building energy performance. The BIPV roof achieved a 38.4% lower residual temperature than the concrete slab at 19:00, indicating superior heat dissipation. The addition of passive fins reduced module temperature by up to 10–12 °C and decreased peak roof temperature by up to 12%. This temperature reduction decreased electrical losses from 13.2% to 10.4%, resulting in a 21% relative reduction in temperature-induced losses. The predicted temperature ranges (≈60–75 °C under peak conditions) are consistent with values reported in experimental and numerical studies of BIPV systems in hot climates, supporting the physical realism of the model. Convective heat transfer was represented using effective coefficients, providing a computationally efficient engineering approximation of air-side heat exchange. Despite construction cost increases of up to 38%, PV integration achieved competitive payback periods of approximately 8.5–9 months under hot climate conditions. This economic assessment is based on a simple payback approach using an incremental cost formulation, where the photovoltaic system replaces the conventional concrete roof, reducing the effective investment. This study introduces a reproducible 3D transient FEM methodology for evaluating BIPV roofs under field-measured climatic boundary conditions. The framework explicitly couples geometry-resolved passive cooling, full-day thermal evolution, and temperature-dependent electrical losses, providing a physically consistent basis for assessing BIPV design alternatives in hot climates. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Energy Efficiency and Renewable Integration in Sustainable Buildings)
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