flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Customized future weather data now available for online purchase

AEC Tech

Customized future weather data now available for online purchase

Simulation tool, developed by Arup and Argos Analytics, is offered to help owners and AEC firms devise resilience strategies for buildings. 


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | December 18, 2016

AEC firms looking for a hedge against climate-related events can now purchase future weather data online. Image: Pixabay

In 2014, Arup, the engineering and consulting firm, and Argos Analytics, which provides climate data services, developed WeatherShift, a tool that helps building owners mitigate their future cost risk due to climate change.

Last week, Arup and Argos joined forces with Integrated Environmental Solutions Limited (IES), which provides building performance modeling software, to make WeatherShift future weather data available for online purchase.

Users can purchase these data via IES's website [www.iesve.com] by specifying a location, hypothetical emissions scenario, and future time period. Cole Roberts, Arup’s Associate Principal, says that collaborating with IES lowered the entry price for the data files to $250, or 75% below previous offers for this information. The product has also been simplified for repeated uses on multiple projects.

Arup and Argos will provide purchasers with customized future weather data generated by adjusting historical weather data based on climate projections run for the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fifth Assessment Report.

The data can by used to simulate building performance under future climate conditions, which in turn would enable designers to develop resilience strategies. 

WeatherShift is among a growing number of simulation products aimed at giving builders and developers a hedge against natural and manmade events that threaten their structures.

Some of these products, such as those offered by Climate Interactive, are based on game theory. Others include products from EarthNetwork, which offer “hyper-local weather data” in real time and forecasts.

Weather and climate, it would seem, are no longer just conversation pieces. Last week, Ligado Networks and George Mason University announced a partnership to provide the public with real-time access to critical weather and atmospheric data generated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

“Extreme weather events have a huge impact on people, including their families, homes and businesses,” says Deborah Crawford, Mason’s vice president for research. “Faster and more accurate climate modeling and weather prediction will help people and organizations—including emergency responders—better prepare for and respond more quickly to weather-related events such as tornadoes, floods and wildfires, saving lives and livelihoods.”

Related Stories

BIM and Information Technology | Jan 27, 2016

Seeing double: Dassault Systèmes creating Virtual Singapore that mirrors the real world

The virtual city will be used to help predict the outcomes of and possible issues with various scenarios.

3D Printing | Jan 25, 2016

Architecture students create new method for 3D printing concrete

The team's Fossilized project allows for structures that are more varied and volumetric than other forms so far achieved.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Contractors

Contractors expect to spend more time on prefabrication, according to FMI study

Get ready for a surge in prefabrication activity by contractors. FMI, the consulting and investment banking firm, recently polled contractors about how much time they were spending, in craft labor hours, on prefabrication for construction projects. More than 250 contractors participated in the survey, and the average response to that question was 18%. More revealing, however, was the participants’ anticipation that craft hours dedicated to prefab would essentially double, to 34%, within the next five years.


AEC Tech

Lack of organizational readiness is biggest hurdle to artificial intelligence adoption

Managers of companies in the industrial sector, including construction, have bought the hype of artificial intelligence (AI) as a transformative technology, but their organizations are not ready to realize its promise, according to research from IFS, a global cloud enterprise software company. An IFS survey of 1,700 senior decision-makers found that 84% of executives anticipate massive organizational benefits from AI. 


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021