BSRIA Guide to Controls BG83/2023
Contents |
[edit] Summary
BSRIA’s Guide to Controls is aimed at people who are involved in the design, installation and maintenance of buildings and building services. It provides a broad understanding of the topic of controls, supported by diagrams and illustrations.
Controls are an essential part of all building services systems. They play a key role in delivering environmental comfort and wellbeing, a healthy and safe environment, optimal energy use and operational continuity and they allow for monitoring and improvement of performance.
To fulfil their functionalities, controls must integrate with systems such as heating, cooling, ventilation and lighting, but they are often misunderstood by the designers, installers and maintainers of such systems. The BSRIA Guide to Controls demystifies the topic for a general construction industry audience. It complements the existing BSRIA illustrated guides by explaining in a structured way the different types of controls and their applications. However, it provides a greater level of technical detail while still making extensive use of diagrams and illustrations that facilitate understanding of different aspects of the topic. As well as covering state-of-the-art controls, it covers simpler controls that are found in smaller buildings and older buildings.
[edit] Sections
Sections of the guide include:
- Basic control components
- Basic control schemes and applications
- Building management systems
- System architecture and key features
- Building energy management
- Home energy management systems
- Lighting controls
- Integrated systems
- System security
- Procurement considerations
- Commissioning of control systems
- Operation and maintenance of control systems
- Controls in Building Regulations
[edit] Product details
Published: July 2023. Publisher: BSRIA. Author: John Marrow. ISBN: 978-0-86022-798-4.
BSRIA’s Guide to Controls is aimed at people who are involved in the design, installation and maintenance of buildings and building services. It provides a broad understanding of the topic of controls, supported by diagrams and illustrations.
This article appears on the BSRIA bookshop as "Guide to Controls (BG83/2023)" dated July 3, 2023.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Analogue control systems.
- Building management systems.
- Building services.
- Consumer electronics.
- Consumer units.
- Electrical control systems.
- Energy management and building controls.
- Fan coil unit.
- Humidistat.
- HVAC.
- Mechanical and electrical.
- Mechanical, electrical and plumbing MEP.
- Mechanical ventilation.
- Plant room.
- Schematic.
- Thermostat.
- US recommits to clean energy.
- Utilities.
Featured articles
Green space, clean air and community lead the wish list for new homes...
CIAT invites the public to explore identity, belonging and architecture at London Festival of Architecture 2026.
Circular construction policies key to reversing nature loss in cities, says new IUCN report.
Met investigation into Grenfell Tower fire on track to submit all charging files to Crown Prosecution Service.
Living Wage Foundation clarifies paying apprentices the real Living Wage is not required for accreditation.
Call for evidence: Strategy for the built environment professions, trades and occupations.
UK Academy of Mould Experts, May
Free Mould Awareness self-paced beginner course.
IHBC’s Council: On ‘Don’t Waste Buildings’ – A blog feature following a Council chat post by Celia Clark.
The EPF urges publication of the Circular Economy Growth Plan.
ECA welcomes refreshed zero carbon targets.
Government consultation to look a new core product safety framework.
Construct Zero: Refreshed Programme and updated priorities.
New research highlights growing confidence gap in UK fire safety decision making.
Building control approval applications received, determination times, decision outcomes and performance.
Built Environment Wales – Regulatory Reform Conference.
ECA makes the airwaves on retentions ban proposal.
When will the Renters' Right Act come into force?
























Comments
[edit] To make a comment about this article, click 'Add a comment' above. Separate your comments from any existing comments by inserting a horizontal line.