The following is a guest post from Damian Skelton, area vice president at Medxcel Facilities Management.
The building automation system (BAS) is the primary backbone for energy savings in a hospital. From controlling every aspect of the HVAC system (chillers, boilers, air handling units, variable air volume boxes and more), the benefits from a well programed BAS ultimately ensures the HVAC systems operational performance which can reduce energy costs and keep patients, visitors and staff comfortable.
Unfortunately, this system is the least understood and yet one of the most expensive system in a hospital. As technology continues to advance, we are seeing more systems become integrated into the building automation system. This includes systems such as fire alarm, power monitoring, lighting control and security.
One of the many issues in healthcare is that many executives are directing engineers to make multi-million dollar decisions on which manufacturer’s BAS to use in their hospitals without fully understanding that these decisions will have long-term impacts and ramifications on almost every aspect of facility operations and maintenance. The building automation system controls almost all of a hospital’s critical utility systems, and with over 50% of the facility manager’s budget invested in energy, the building automation system should be one of the engineer’s primary focuses. To ensure this decision is not taken lightly and a system that works best for your facility is selected, here are four critical considerations when selecting a building automation system.
1. Needs assessment
Determining the nuances of the current HVAC system in your facility and identifying the needs at the local site are the first step in determining what BAS will be most beneficial for your healthcare organization. One way to achieve this is to make a comprehensive inventory of the existing system. A way to start is by asking your teams to answer a series of basic questions about the current BAS in place. What works? How well does it work? What flat out doesn’t work? What is still being supported? What will not work with an upgraded system?
After you have completed that step, speak directly with BAS users within your facility who represent different perspectives (e.g. HVAC operators, field technicians, etc.). Gaining insights from these critical users will help to determine what attributes they consider necessary for the BAS system. Once all this information is collected, compile it with the inventory list – the data from these activities will help you create a prioritized plan.
2. Regulatory compliance
Compliance remains a crucial component of every decision a healthcare facility makes. Just the same, the building automation system you use must maintain compliance with all regulatory requirements. Key requirements are temperature, humidity, space pressures and air changes. A well-designed BAS can facilitate management of compliance issues by issuing immediate alerts, displaying informative graphics and dashboards displaying critical environment conditions.
When properly displayed and trended, troubleshooting is simplified for critical environments with high occupancy. The BAS should also ensure accountability within your facility by alerting personnel when temperature, humidity or pressure readings are outside of the acceptable ranges. This helps the facilities staff to quickly identify issues and bring the building back into compliance.
3. Ease of use
Nothing slows a facilities department down like a clunky system that is hard to use, ultimately impacting the efficiency of work and the overall patient experience. HVAC and facility technicians already have multiple priorities when maintaining a hospital. By ensuring a user-friendly interface with dashboards, easy-to-read graphics and logical drill down screens, the time to monitor, evaluate, adjust and troubleshoot daily operations will be minimized and staff can depend on the BAS to help them resolve issues quickly.
Important factors such as detailed, specific control drawings and sequences of operations must be considered during the early stages of the design process of a BAS. The end goal is a detailed and customized set of future-proof specifications for the facility.
4. Energy savings
Healthcare executives across the nation are feeling the pressure to reduce energy usage. BASs are essential for generating energy savings throughout a facility and it can be used to implement programing and monitor equipment to ensure energy is not being wasted. Implementing occupied and unoccupied schedules for areas like offices or classrooms is an economical way to save energy.
In addition to implementing control sequences, the BAS is a valuable tool for monitoring systems and equipment. For example, chillers have the potential to be huge energy wasters. Using the BAS trending functions can help facility managers quickly spot problems like frequent starts and stops. A properly designed BAS can also provide the facility manager with daily electric and natural gas consumption trending that supports best practice energy saving strategies.
Healthcare facilities are not static buildings that remain unchanged from the day they are built. It is important to have a carefully crafted plan to ensure the key factors of the system are considered.