As a plumbing designer and installer, I have been struggling to convey to the customer what their project will look like in the after the installation. For some reason or another, photos of existing installations just don’t do the trick. Another hurdle that I have recently overcome was designing the solar arrays on a building that doesn’t even exist yet. The structural team needed a layout of the arrays on the roof to properly design the structural reinforcement needed to accommodate the new weight of the panels and added snow loads. Ordinarily to calculate the number of solar panels and location you need to first determine the amount of solar shading that you will receive in a given location. The Solar Pathfinder has been the tool of choice in the solar industry for years, but you need the physical site to utilize the tool. I currently use AutoCAD MEP 2010 for all my piping plans for coordination and submittal of construction documents. The software comes with a multitude of tools to help visualize the end product of your system. This gave me the inspiration to use this to consider the physical and esthetic attributes that the panels can have to a building’s architecture. With a picture you are only limited to a display from one point of view. Being able to model the objects in 3D, apply geographical information to the model, along with a date and to jazz it up little some materials you are able to render a very realistic picture of what the project will look like. When the customer decides that they want to see what it would look like from a different point of view or you decide there is not enough sunlight in your location you can move objects around or create and create a different view or create a video. Proposed Solar Array Layout for UW Milwaukee's New Dorms
This would be the sun at 11:00 on 4-24-09.
Have you revisited this lately? There are a tone of tools now that you can use to model the panels, even add wattage values to them. You can model the evaporative cooling tower next to the panels and see where its shadow falls. There's a built in solar study tool in Revit MEP now. You can use Recap to video or photo the building, and you can photo or video it using a radio controlled copter, then overlay the solar panels onto the photo accurate mass generated from ReCap - it's crazy fun now.
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