Title: WHY BACnet
1WHY BACnet?
2Current Situation
- Building owners are frustrated by the lack of a
building automation system that is standardized
and can be easily expanded - Buyers feel locked in by vendors and their
proprietary communications protocols - These proprietary protocols often lead to higher
installed costs because of the need for so many
translation devices - Customers are looking for a single source for all
their HVAC needs
3What is BACnet?
- BACnet is simply a pre-defined set of rules that
apply to a computer's hardware and software. No
manufacturer owns any part of BACnet. - BACnet is an acronym for Building Automation and
Controls network." development by an independent
council of engineers under the auspices of the
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and
Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). - BACnet allows interoperable systems to be
developed. It is an ASHRAE standard, an American
national standard, a European pre-standard, and a
potential global standard. - The essence of BACnet is contained in a technical
specification that is available either as a paper
copy or on a CD. It is technology independent. - The protocol is used in the following industries,
HVAC, Power, Security and Access Control,
Vertical Transport, Lighting, Fire and Life
Safety - BACnet is not a thing you can buy. BACnet is
literally a book that defines methods which a
manufacturer can use, if it chooses to make
systems which can be interoperable with other
BACnet systems in various ways.
4Why BACnet?
- BACnet 's purpose is to standardize communication
between building automation devices from
different manufacturers, allowing data to be
shared and equipment to interoperate. A
consortium of building managers, system users and
manufacturers developed the standard to give
facilities more choices, uniformity and
flexibility. - BACnet does not prescribe the operating platform
or how much of the standard must be incorporated,
this freedom makes it well suited to meet Yorks
evolving needs - Embracing one technology simplifies field /
factory implementation, and supports lowest
installed cost goals - Its implementation is extensible, and can be
used to address various complexity levels within
HVAC systems
5Market position
Proprietary68
TCP/IP1
LonWorks6
Other2
BACnet23
6BACS Protocol Use in North America
This graph does not take into account YORK
converting to BACnet
7A recent Internet poll asked the following
question..
What communications protocol do you most commonly
use on building automation jobs?
8 BACnet Installations
Projects
27,715 Multi-Vendor Projects
6,062 Number of Buildings
32,539 Connected Points 57,699,925
9BACnet Offers.
Practical interoperability between multiple
vendors Scalability between cost, performance and
size Highest performance Lowest cost Unrestricted
growth