Smart Buildings Action Cluster: Difference between revisions

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{{ActionCluster
{{ActionCluster
| title              = Smart Buildings Action Cluster (SBAC)
| title              = Smart Buildings Action Cluster (SBAC)
| team              = NTIA and TIA
| team              = NTIA, TIA
| leader            = Jean Rice, Senior Program Specialist, Broadband USA
| leader            = Jean Rice, Senior Program Specialist, Broadband USA
| email              = jrice@ntia.gov
| email              = jrice@ntia.gov

Revision as of 01:06, November 15, 2021


Smart Buildings Action Cluster
GCTC logo 344x80.png
Smart-building-1.jpeg
Smart Buildings & Smart Cities: Symbiotic and Integral
Team Organizations NTIA
TIA
Team Leaders Jean Rice
Senior Program Specialist
Broadband USA
Participating Municipalities San Mateo County
CA
Status Development
Document [[File:Tech Jam Presentation|Download]]

Description

SBAC will focus on smart buildings within the environment of communities on a local and regional level. There are a number of issues pertaining to communications, connectivity and integration that need to be resolved. This group will discuss these issues and others that arise over time, as well as work to provide best practices and prototype demonstrations of such.

Challenges

SBAC will focus on 4 primary areas to start:

1. Interoperability of communications and applications between buildings and their environment (city, town, campus) and Security & Privacy – this will deal with cyber and physical security as well as privacy issues

2. Health Care- teleheath, telemedicine, smart building tech for health, interfacing with the health care community on prevention

3. Transportation – public and private transportation, connected and autonomous, applications and infrastructure

4. Energy – numerous issues including energy efficiency, demand by IoT applications and devices, and network infrastructure, energy generation, energy micro-grids.

Solutions

TBD

Major Requirements

The approach would be as follows:

1. Find testbed cities willing to offer buildings or areas of buildings (campuses, hospital, university, other) to act as testbeds.

2. Ascertain the issue(s) they want addressed which fall (ideally) within the first 4 topics listed above.

3. Determine the first project to be done in that building. Objectives, deliverables, timeline.

4. Determine the partners.

5. Schedule kick-off date and first steps.

Performance Targets

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) Measurement Methods

The KPIs are not yet known. Here are prospective deliverables: • Interoperability best practices between a building and surrounding campus/community/city. • Best practices for energy management among and between buildings in a sample micro/nano grid. • Best practices for managing integrated communications and systems within a hospital. • Paper on IoT enabled buildings’ power needs. • Paper on the interconnection of buildings to cities regarding public and private transportation.

TBD

Standards, Replicability, Scalability, and Sustainability

This cluster is focusing its first efforts on key issues that need resolution as listed both above and in the KPIs/deliverables section. We anticipate the development of guidelines, frameworks, and, if needed, standards, that will incentivize the desired behavior in the construction of smart buildings, and as a result, smart cities. For example, seamless interoperability/interconnection between a building and a city’s infrastructure is paramount, otherwise neither will be effectively “smart.” Even just choosing this as a topic, will provide invaluable guidance that can be used by the real estate industry and communities across the U.S. to support infrastructure deployment, with buildings being a key component of that infrastructure.

Cybersecurity and Privacy

As noted in the Interoperability focus above, cyber and physical security will be included in the areas covered. Buildings are extremely vulnerable with IoT devices proliferating an environment, many of which are not security hardened. The group will be looking at this. Physical security is also very important both with regard to intelligent access controls, and also regarding such things as edge data centers which can be located in a small office in a building. Many vulnerabilities will need to be addressed.

Impacts

Anticipated project impacts:

  • Acceleration of smart city infrastructure deployment
  • Scalable economic development for areas of new construction and retrofit
  • Increase of businesses and jobs in the developed area
  • Increased happiness factor for tenants and citizens
  • Lower energy usage for smart buildings

Demonstration/Deployment

TBD