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The energy audit program provides context based help buttons in the program that look like Green Circles with a Question Mark in them. You can click these to get help on nearly any field in the program.
This wiki is designed to provide both the beginner and professional user the knowledge and guidance necessary to complete an Energy Assessment using our tool. We invite you to submit your recommendations and examples to help build this wiki into a complete reference library.
Data Locking: Certain data fields get locked when you print a final draft of the report. DO NOT PRINT A FINAL REPORT until you are 100% sure the data in the Building Description page is correct. You will not be able to edit most of this data once you print a report. This ensures project consistency in the database. Please use the online “DRAFT REPORT” function until you know your data is correct.
Picture Uploading: Upload as many pictures as you want into the program, but please be aware that Browsing and uploading your photos by double-clicking does not save the photo as a change to the page and won't show up until you have SAVED THE PAGE. Click the “SAVE” button on the page to do this. You may also need to refresh the page you're on in order to see the photo you just uploaded.
Compatibility: While we make every effort to ensure our program works on all browsers, we have had the fewest instances of glitches in the Chrome browser. If you have more than one browser available, you may enjoy a better user experience in Chrome.
Credit Card Security: We do NOT save your credit card information unless you opt-in for automatic renewal of your account. We use a one-time processing service that we pay a fee to in effort to prevent any credit card fraud to your account.
Contact Information Privacy: We do NOT sell or give out your contact information to 3 parties. We may and will use it to contact you about your account when necessary. You will not receive SPAM from us. We do offer services to which you can opt-in or request we locate a service provider to get in touch with you. In this case, only those providers will be given your information.
Physical Address This is the listed address of the property. It should be the same one used by the post office and other official entities. Please note that our software will lock this license to the particular address that you enter. You will only have a few days to make any corrections to this address before our system prevents any changes from being made to the address, city, state, or ZIP code that you enter.
City This is the actual legal city and not an unofficial suburb name of the area. For instance, an area may be referred to by residents as 'Bosley Heights' but it may actually be in a city like Chicago or Denver.
State The state in which the property exists.
Zipcode This is the postal zipcode for the property. If you don't know the zipcode and this is not populating automatically, then you can try http://www.usnaviguide.com/zip.htm . This free website allows you to enter an address and see the outline of the zipcode where it is located.
Latitude This should automatically populate. However, there are options to determining latitude and longitude. One option is to go to “” http://geocoder.ca/ “” or “” http://stevemorse.org/jcal/latlon.php “”. The other option is to look up the geographic coordinates (latitude and longitude) of a spot on the map using Google Maps, following the steps below:
1.Right-click on the desired spot on the map to bring up a menu with options. 2.In the menu, select What’s here?. 3.Click the green arrow to get the latitude and longitude coordinates, or look in the search box - the numbers should populate there.“
Longitude See Latitude.
Property-Type “This is a pulldown menu listing different options such as: office, hotel/motel, apartment, education, healthcare, etc. please select the primary classification for your particular facility. An additional menu, if applicable, will present itself to the right of this first pulldown menu. It will present other options to you. For instance, in the case of an office building, there are different sub classifications such as; owner occupied, leased with 1-5 tenants, or leased with greater than 5 tenants. In some cases you will see a third menu created to the right of the second menu. This is primarily for use when an accurate description of your facility is not available and you choose ”“other”” as a category for your building. You can then type in the description of your building in the third menu field.“
Project-Name There is no right or wrong answer for this field. Many facilities and buildings are given a name or a nickname instead of just using the address as the primary description. An example would be instead of referring to your location as 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, you would refer to as “The White House”. If there is a name for your facility enter that name here.
Building-ID If you are building has a unique identification number that is used for any internal purposes, for instance a unique Tax ID, business cost center identification, or purchase order number, you can enter that number here. It is an optional field and is not used for any purpose other than for your internal reference.
Project-Audit-Date This will be the date of your audit. For instance, you can choose the date you start auditing, or the date you complete auditing. The choice depends on how you intend to record your auditing dates.
Year-Built This should be the date the property opened for business, or was 'completed' if the start of business came after the completed construction of the building. This date should not be the date permits were issued or the date the property 'broke ground'.
Annual-HDD “Heating and Cooling Degree Days are used to determine the impact that the climate has on your energy consumption. It's easy to see why building located in Arizona would require more air-conditioning than a building located in Wisconsin. Conversely it's easy to see why the building in Wisconsin would require more heating in the building in Arizona. This particular field is for the purpose of recording the number of Degree Days that affect your facility. The National Climactic Data Center which is part of the US Department of Commerce, along with The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) tracks atmospheric conditions and degree day information and has produced a chart that is used to determine the Degree Days that affect different metropolitan areas. If this information does not automatically populate you may click the link to be taken to this chart. On the chart you will see listed in the first column, the metropolitan areas in alphabetical order by state. Take the metropolitan area that best represents your location. On that same line in the last column labeled ”“ANN””, will be the total number of degree days that you will want to put into this field. If the automatic link is not working, you can type this into your browser, ““http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/online/ccd/nrmhdd.html”” . Here are two examples: 1- If your building is located somewhere near Buffalo, New York, you would look in the annual column and find the number 6693. This is the number of heating degree days in the Buffalo, New York area. 2- If your building happens to be near Miami, Florida, you would look in the annual column and find the number 155. The colder the climate, the higher the number of Heating Degree Days associated with that area.“
Annual-CDD “Heating and Cooling Degree Days are used to determine the impact that the climate has on your energy consumption. It's easy to see why building located in Arizona would require more air-conditioning than a building located in Wisconsin. Conversely it's easy to see why the building in Wisconsin would require more heating in the building in Arizona. This particular field is for the purpose of recording the number of Degree Days that affect your facility. The National Climactic Data Center which is part of the US Department of Commerce, along with The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) tracks atmospheric conditions and degree day information and has produced a chart that is used to determine the Degree Days that affect different metropolitan areas. If this information does not automatically populate you may click the link to be taken to this chart. On the chart you will see listed in the first column, the metropolitan areas in alphabetical order by state. Take the metropolitan area that best represents your location. On that same line in the last column labeled ”“ANN””, will be the total number of degree days that you will want to put into this field. If the automatic link is not working, you can type this into your browser, ““http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/online/ccd/nrmcdd.html”” . Here are two examples: 1- If your building is located somewhere near Buffalo, New York, you would look in the annual column and find the number 548. This is the number of Cooling Degree Days in the Buffalo, New York area. 2- If your building happens to be near Miami, Florida, you would look in the annual column and find the number 4383. The hotter the climate, the higher the number of Cooling Degree Days associated with that area.“
Gross-Floor-Area This will be the total square footage of the building including all space that is un-leaseable, mechanical, utility, or other type spaces. For instance, if a one story building is 100 feet long and 100 feet wide, it is 10,000 GROSS square feet. Because of electric rooms, mechanical rooms, plumbing chases, etc. the Usable or Rentable square feet might only be 9,000 square feet.
Total-Conditioned-Area This is the total area that is served by Heating or Air Conditioning only. A ventilated space that is neither heated nor cooled is not considered a “Conditioned” space. For instance, you may have a 9,000 square foot facility, but 1,000 square feet of it may be storage that is only ventilated. In this case, the Total Conditioned Area would be 8,000 square feet.