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Draft:Conrad U. Brunner

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  • Comment: Please add sources to the sections and/or remove them altogether. ❯❯❯ Raydann(Talk) 09:11, 23 July 2023 (UTC)
  • Comment: Most of this draft is completely unsourced. All of your references are in 1 section. ― Blaze WolfTalkBlaze Wolf#6545 15:33, 25 April 2023 (UTC)

Conrad U. Brunner (*18 June 1942 in Zurich) is a Swiss architect, researcher and energy efficiency expert. He developed energy-efficient buildings in the 70s and worked on international standards for buildings and energy-efficient products since 2000.

Life and education

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Conrad U. Brunner studied architecture from 1962 at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich in Switzerland, he received his Architect's Diploma from Alfred Roth in 1967. Subsequently, he studied from 1968 at the University of Pennsylvania USA in the Stuart Weitzman School of Design the master class of Louis I. Kahn. He earned his Master of Architecture degree in 1969. At this time he won the design competition for the F. Schenk-Henry Gillette Woodman Scholarship that helped him to continue his work from 1971 to 1972 in Japan.

Professional experience

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Conrad U. Brunner (2002)

He worked from 1968 to 1971 as a staff architect with Louis I. Kahn (*1901 to 1974) in the office in Philadelphia, USA. His main assignment was the Theater in Fort Wayne Indiana. He then worked from 1971 to 1972 in the office of Fumihiko Maki (*1928 to 2024) in Tokyo Japan as a staff architect and urban designer on Yokohama reclaimed land housing projects and the Kotesashi Railway Centre.

After his return to Switzerland in 1972, he worked with Peter Steiger (*1928 to 2024) in a research and development group for health, aging and ecological issues. Here in 1973, in an interdisciplinary team the pioneering working group PLENAR Planning - Energy - Architecture was founded. In 1976 Conrad U. Brunner started his independent architect's practice CUB Architecture - Planning - Energy in Zurich.[1].

In 1986 he was nominated by the Swiss Federal Council as energy efficiency expert in the Expert group for national energy scenarios (EGES) until 2007. From 1987 until 1993 Conrad U. Brunner served as president of the Swiss Energy Foundation. In this period, the Referendum for the Nuclear Moratorium was won in 1990 which initiated the subsequent exit of nucear power in Switzerland. In 2010 IEC nominated him until 2022 to the Advisory Committee of Energy Efficiency that supervises the entire body of IEC standards on this subject. In 2006 he joined the IEC Technical Committee 2 Rotating Machinery as the Swiss representative. IEC in 2017 honored Conrad U. Brunner with the "IEC 1907 Award" in Recognition of his 10 years of outstanding support in the field of energy efficiency of electric motors and power drive systems.

Ecology

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Conrad U. Brunner experienced the first Earth Day in 1970 in Philadelphie. Initial studies in 1972 within the Research & Develoment group with Peter Steiger et al. led to the first insight that 50% of thermal energy in Switzerland is used in residential, commercial as well as public buildings. The reduction of the high consumption of fossil fuels for heating and hot water at the source was then considered the first goal and the most direct way to reduce carbon dioxid emission and local pollution.

Work in the field of ecology and energy was initially carried out with the PLENAR working group. In 1975, the basics on energy-efficient buildings was published under the title PLENAR Planning - Energy - Architecture[2] by Niggli-Verlag. In 1998, with the expansion of the research from buildings to electricity and industry, the Swiss Agency for Energy Efficiency (S.A.F.E.) was launched in Switzerland.

The start for scientific research in the field of energy efficiency in buildings was supported by a grant by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) in 1977. In 1978 a first Overview of research of energy efficient buildings[3] was published. Various research papers on energy efficient construction methods were published: Thermal bridges[4], Compendium for energy efficient public buildings[5], Buildings with highly glazed facades[6], Buildings for a future with warmer climate.[7] The energetic refurbishment of the cooperative housing estate with 226 apartments at Limmatstrasse in Zurich[8] can be seen as an early pioneering work with scientific supervision by the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology.

In 2008 the International Energy Agency IEA Technical Cooperation Programme Energy Efficient End-use Equipment 4E was launched. At the same time the Electric Motor Systems Annex (EMSA) was initiated and guided with Conrad U. Brunner as Operating Agent until 2014 and Task Leader International Standards until 2019. Between 2007 and 2021 a total of 9 international conferences were held under the name Motor Summit in Zurich Switzerland. A widely referenced research study in the IEA Energy Efficiency Series was published in 2011 by Paul Waide and Conrad U. Brunner "Energy-Efficiency Policy Opportunities for Electric Motor-Driven Systems"[9]

As of 2016 the successor company Impact-Energy was launched in collaboration with Rita Werle and Rolf Tieben. Conrad U. Brunner served as co-founder and president of the board until 2020.

International standards

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Conrad U. Brunner was involved from 1980 in the creation of standards for energy effciency both of buildings, later on electrical appliances and industrial machines on the Swiss national level (SIA), the European (CENELEC, CEN) and the international level (IEC and ISO). The first edition of the Swiss standard SIA 380/1 Thermal Energy in Buildings (Thermische Energie im Hochbau) was published in 1988. It was later integrated and coordinated with EN ISO 13790 Energy performance of buildings. It included a new calculation method "heat balance" for heat gains and losses to determine the annual net heating requirements which is now widely accepted as a global standard. With research from S.A.F.E. and others the basic elements for a Swiss standard SIA 380/4 Electric energy use in buildings (Elektrische Energie im Hochbau) was published in 1995.

Until 2007 the electric motor testing standards were in conflict between between USA standard IEEE 112 Method B and IEC 60034-2. With electric motors using some 50% of global electricity consumption the development and the international trade of efficient products was severly hampered. A worldwide community of practice was initiated at the international conference on Energy Efficiency in Motor Driven Systems (EEMODS) in Heidelberg Germany in 2005. Under the chairmanship of Martin Doppelbauer of IEC Technical Committee 2, the new globally coordinated motor testing standard IEC 60034-2-1 was published in 2007. The new performance standard of electric motors IEC 60034-30 Efficiency classes (IE-code) was published in 2008. With these two basic elements the energy efficiency regulation for the minimum energy performance requirements on IE3 level were accepted later world-wide.

With the support of IEC ACEE and 4E EMSA, Maarten van Werkhoven and Conrad U. Brunner launched the initiative for Coordination & Alignment of IEC and ISO Standards for Energy Efficient Electric Motor Driven System in 2019 in Tokyo Japan. In October 2021 IEC and ISO agreed to formally launch a Joint Advisory Group JAG 22 to initiate closer cooperation between electrical (IEC) and mechanical (ISO) standards.

Concrete Art

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After the death of his research collaborator and artist friend Jürg Nänni (*1942 to 2019), Conrad U. Brunner initiated work on the inventory of his computer generated pictures in Concrete Art which shall eventually be exhibited and published. So far 1'000 individual works have been identified and included in the Jürg Nänni Inventory [JNI]. Jürg Nänni cooperated with Hans Knuchel and the blelb[10] group to develop new insights on visual perception.[11]

Since 2023 Conrad U. Brunner serves as member of the Board of Trustees of the Espace de l'Art Concret eac in Mouans-Sartoux, France.

Notes and references

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  1. ^ Rucki, Isabelle (1995). Architektenlexikon der Schweiz 19./20. Jahrhundert [Architects Lexicon 19th/20th Century Switzerland] (in German). Basel Switzerland: Birkhäuser Verlag Basel-Boston-Berlin. ISBN 978-3-76435-261-5.
  2. ^ Peter Steiger, Conrad U. Brunner (1975), The PLENAR Research Group (ed.), PLENAR Planung - Energie - Architektur, Niederteufen, Appenzell, Switzerland: Publisher Arthur Niggli, ISBN 3-7212-00780
  3. ^ Conrad U. Brunner (1978), Swiss national agency for housing (ed.), "Energy efficient buildings - status, gaps and priorities for research", Publications of Research Reports on Housing Issues, no. 3, Berne Switzeralnd: EDMZ
  4. ^ Conrad U. Brunner, Jürg Nänni (1985), Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA (ed.), "Thermal bridges in new buildings", Documentation Series, no. D 99, Zurich Switzerland: Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA
  5. ^ Conrad U. Brunner, Laslo Füzesséry (1981), Swiss public building administration (ed.), Energy efficient new buildings - a compendium for public buildings, Berne Switzerland: Eidgenössische Drucksachen und Materialzentrale
  6. ^ Conrad U. Brunner (2002), Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA (ed.), Highly glazed buidlings - thermal comfort and energy efficiency, vol. Documentation series, Zurich Switzerland: Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA, ISBN 3-908483-34-4
  7. ^ Conrad U. Brunner (2008), Swiss Federal Office of Energy (ed.), Buildings for a future with warmer climate, Zurich Switzerland: Faktor publishers, ISBN 978-3-905711-03-5
  8. ^ Conrad U. Brunner (1984), Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA (ed.), "Planning of refurbishment: energy concept and results of energetic improvements", Journal for Swiss Engineers and Architects, vol. 1984, no. 12, Zurich Switzerland: Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects SIA, pp. 214–218
  9. ^ Paul Waide, Conrad U. Brunner (2011), International Energy Agency IEA (ed.), "Energy-Efficiency Policy Opportunities for Electric Motor-Driven Systems", Energy Efficiency Series, Paris: Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development/International Energy Agency
  10. ^ Jürg Nänni (2009). "blelb visual perception lab". blelb visual perception lab (in German). Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  11. ^ Nänni, Jürg (2008). Visual Perception (in English and German). Sulgen Switzerland: Niggli AG. ISBN 978-3-7212-0618-0.

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