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 Prof. O’Brien Assignment 1 ENVE4105 Using a graphical layout program of your choice (e.g., P owerPoint, Publisher, InDesign, Visio), create an infographic for visualizing building performance data. Try to answer one specific question about building performance. The topic is open; some ideas to get your mind o n-track include:  How has the energy bre akdown between residential, commercial, and industrial buildings changed over the decades?  Have buildings become more energy efficient? Does this matter considering they are getting bigger (on a per person basis)?  How have the portions of heating and cooling changed over time vs. lighting?  How much solar array area wo uld be required to supply each Canadian with enough electr icity to offset their housing energy?  What technologies are used for windows in Canadian homes? For heating and cooling? The infographic must fit on 8.5 by 11 inch paper and include 0.5 inch margins on all sides; use portrait orientation . It should be in colour, but readable if printed in grayscale. It must contain the following elements: 1. The subject name/title in 36-pt (1” tall), Arial font. 2. Your full name in 12-pt font in the bottom-right corner. 3. Obey copyright/plagiarism rules. If you reference any ot her works (including images), discretely include them on the infographic in 8-pt font. 4. No more than 150 words total, excluding the above three items. 5. Diagrams, graphs, images, and/or photographs. Using a major database for building performance, e.g., SHEU (http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/publications/statistics/sheu07/index.cfm?attr=0  ), NRCan Energy Use Handbook (http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/publications/statistics/handbook2010/handbook2013.pdf ), Canadian Housing Database (see cuLearn), Building Energy End-Use Analysis and Data Centre (http://www.cbeedac.com/search/index.php ), US Building Energy Data Book (http://buildingsdatabook.eren.doe.gov/default.aspx ) provide a useful analysis and communicate it effectively assuming your target audience has a high school education or greater. It is very important to use the right type of graphs. Poor choice of graphs and bias is all too common in the media. Evaluation: submissions will be graded based on their ability to clearly communicate the topic and on technical correctness and scientifically appropriate use of analysis and/or graphs. However, students are encouraged to be creative, since select infographics will be posted in a display case outside the main office of the D epartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Tips:  See hall on Floor 3 o f Mackenzie Building around the corner from the CEE office for last year’s assignment submissions (different topic).  Keep it graphic-heavy; text-light (no more than 150 words)  Make it self-explanatory  Examples may help communicate complex concepts  Avoid making your infographic too visually busy  All text and figures should be clearly le gible from a 1-meter viewing distance  Avoid pixelated, grainy images  Check examples on visual.ly or infographic.org for inspiration  See: http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html or http://www.coolinfographics.com/  Print your infographic (grayscale is fine) and submit in class on the due date. Also submit the PDF to the designated space on cuLearn by the due date (please use a high resolution for possible future scaling; but try to keep file size under 5 MB).

Assignment #1 - Infographic

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  • Prof. OBrien Assignment 1 ENVE4105

    Using a graphical layout program of your choice (e.g., PowerPoint, Publisher, InDesign, Visio), create an infographic for visualizing building performance data. Try to answer one specific question about building performance. The topic is open; some ideas to get your mind on-track include:

    How has the energy breakdown between residential, commercial, and industrial buildings changed over the decades?

    Have buildings become more energy efficient? Does this matter considering they are getting bigger (on a per person basis)?

    How have the portions of heating and cooling changed over time vs. lighting?

    How much solar array area would be required to supply each Canadian with enough electricity to offset their housing energy?

    What technologies are used for windows in Canadian homes? For heating and cooling?

    The infographic must fit on 8.5 by 11 inch paper and include 0.5 inch margins on all sides; use portrait orientation. It should be in colour, but readable if printed in grayscale. It must contain the following elements:

    1. The subject name/title in 36-pt (1 tall), Arial font. 2. Your full name in 12-pt font in the bottom-right corner. 3. Obey copyright/plagiarism rules. If you reference any other works (including images), discretely include them on

    the infographic in 8-pt font. 4. No more than 150 words total, excluding the above three items. 5. Diagrams, graphs, images, and/or photographs.

    Using a major database for building performance, e.g., SHEU (http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/publications/statistics/sheu07/index.cfm?attr=0 ), NRCan Energy Use Handbook (http://oee.nrcan.gc.ca/publications/statistics/handbook2010/handbook2013.pdf), Canadian Housing Database (see cuLearn), Building Energy End-Use Analysis and Data Centre (http://www.cbeedac.com/search/index.php), US Building Energy Data Book (http://buildingsdatabook.eren.doe.gov/default.aspx) provide a useful analysis and communicate it effectively assuming your target audience has a high school education or greater. It is very important to use the right type of graphs. Poor choice of graphs and bias is all too common in the media.

    Evaluation: submissions will be graded based on their ability to clearly communicate the topic and on technical correctness and scientifically appropriate use of analysis and/or graphs. However, students are encouraged to be creative, since select infographics will be posted in a display case outside the main office of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.

    Tips:

    See hall on Floor 3 of Mackenzie Building around the corner from the CEE office for last years assignment submissions (different topic).

    Keep it graphic-heavy; text-light (no more than 150 words)

    Make it self-explanatory

    Examples may help communicate complex concepts

    Avoid making your infographic too visually busy

    All text and figures should be clearly legible from a 1-meter viewing distance

    Avoid pixelated, grainy images

    Check examples on visual.ly or infographic.org for inspiration

    See: http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html or http://www.coolinfographics.com/

    Print your infographic (grayscale is fine) and submit in class on the due date. Also submit the PDF to the designated space on cuLearn by the due date (please use a high resolution for possible future scaling; but try to keep file size under 5 MB).