The develop
branch is under active development. Find the latest release here.
ResStock™, built on the OpenStudio platform, is a project geared at modeling existing residential building stocks at national, regional, or local scales with a high-degree of granularity (e.g., one physics-based simulation model for every 200 dwelling units), using the EnergyPlus simulation engine. Information about ComStock™, a sister tool for modeling the commercial building stock, can be found here.
This repository contains:
- Housing characteristics of the U.S. residential building stock, in the form of conditional probability distributions stored as tab-separated value (.tsv) files. A visualization of the dependency structure can be found here.
- A library of housing characteristic "options" that translate high-level characteristic parameters into arguments for OpenStudio Measures, and which are referenced by the housing characteristic .tsv files and building energy upgrades defined in project definition files
- Project definition files:
- v2.3.0 and later: buildstockbatch YML files openable in any text editor
- v2.2.5 and prior: Project folder openable in PAT
- Building-level OpenStudio Measures for automatically constructing OpenStudio Models of each representative building model
- Higher-level OpenStudio Measures for controlling simulation inputs and outputs
This repository does not contain software for running ResStock simulations, which can be found as follows:
- Versions 2.3.0 and later only support the use of buildstockbatch for deploying simulations on high-performance or cloud computing. Version 2.3.0 also removed separate projects for single-family detached and multifamily buildings, in lieu of a combined
project_national
representing the U.S. residential building stock. See the changelog for more details. - Versions 2.2.5 and prior support the use of the publicly available OpenStudio-PAT software as an interface for deploying simulations on cloud computing. Read the documentation for v2.2.5.
Note that calibration/validation of the multifamily sector, as well as timeseries output, is still ongoing, under the End-Use Load Profile for the U.S. Building Stock project.