Thermal Comfort — NBC vs ASHRAE 55 vs ISO 7730 vs Adaptive Model

Thermal Comfort — NBC vs ASHRAE 55 vs ISO 7730 vs Adaptive Model

By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · HVAC · 11 May 2026

Reading time ~ 8 min · Originally published: 08 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026

For a Bengaluru office, the default “24 °C DBT, 55 % RH” prescriptive setpoint burns 842,000 kWh/year on cooling. Switching to ASHRAE 55 §5.4 adaptive bands (24-28 °C indoor, sliding with outdoor mean) saves 27 % cooling kWh with better occupant satisfaction. Four comfort standards, one HVAC system — which one to design to and how to defend it to the AHJ.

Why we never just pick “24/55” for an Indian office

The default “24 °C DBT, 55 % RH” you see in 90 % of Indian DBR documents comes from a misreading of ASHRAE 55. The actual ASHRAE 55 summer comfort envelope is broader: 24.5-27.5 °C DBT with 30-60 % RH for typical office clothing (1.0 clo) and metabolic rate (1.2 met). NBC 2016 Part 8 §1.3 prescribes a tighter envelope of 24-26 °C DBT and 40-60 % RH for general assembly and office spaces. The two are not identical, and the difference shows up as ~6 % chiller plant kW over the year.

The newer thinking — adaptive thermal comfort per ASHRAE 55 Section 5.4 — is what we should be using on naturally-ventilated and mixed-mode buildings in India. Adaptive bands run 20-30 °C indoor when outdoor monthly mean is 22-28 °C. For Bengaluru, Pune, Hyderabad most of the year, this gives 28 °C indoor as compliant — a 4 °C jump from the prescriptive 24 °C, with 12-15 % chiller-energy reduction.

// FIG · MEPVAULT Thermal comfort design range — DBT (°C) for office occupancies 0.0 15.4 30.8 46.2 61.6 77.0 Value (°C or %RH) 22.5 20.5 20.0 20.0 Winter design DBT 25.5 24.5 24.0 26.0 Summer design DBT 40 30 30 25 RH summer min 60 60 70 60 RH summer max NBC 2016 ASHRAE 55 ISO 7730 Cat B EN 16798 Cat II SOURCE: NBC 2016 Pt 8 §1.3; ASHRAE 55-2020 §5.3; ISO 7730:2005 §A.1; EN 16798-1:2019 Cat II · plotted 2026-05-11

A Bengaluru office year — prescriptive vs adaptive simulation

40,000 m² office, glass façade, 200 m² perimeter. EnergyPlus run with TMY3 weather:

Setpoint strategy Annual cooling kWh Annual heating kWh Total Comfort hours (PPD < 10 %)
Prescriptive 24 °C ± 0.5 842,000 0 842,000 7,920 hr (90 %)
Prescriptive 25 °C ± 0.5 761,000 0 761,000 7,815 hr (89 %)
Adaptive 24-28 °C band (mixed-mode) 680,000 0 680,000 8,400 hr (96 %)
Adaptive + DCV (CO₂ ≤ 1000 ppm) 612,000 0 612,000 8,395 hr (96 %)

Net: adaptive setpoint plus DCV cuts 27 % off annual cooling kWh on the same building with better occupant-satisfaction scores. The reason it is not standard practice in India is procurement inertia and the AHJ habit of asking “what is your set point?” before approving an HVAC drawing. The answer “24 °C in occupied band, drifting to 27 °C as outdoor moderates” tests reviewer patience but is technically correct under ASHRAE 55 §5.4.

What we always document in the design basis

  1. Setpoint strategy: prescriptive (single point + tolerance) or adaptive (sliding band per ASHRAE 55 §5.4).
  2. Reference standard cited: NBC for AHJ compliance + ASHRAE 55 / ISO 7730 for engineering basis.
  3. Comfort metric used: PPD ≤ 10 % (ASHRAE 55 Category II) or 80 % satisfied (adaptive).
  4. Operative temperature vs DBT — operative is the right metric, DBT is the proxy. State this on the drawing.
  5. Clothing + metabolic assumptions: 1.0 clo + 1.2 met for office; 0.5 clo + 1.0 met for residential; 1.0 clo + 1.4 met for retail.
  6. Humidity-only constraints: pharmaceutical and museum projects override the comfort band with the process band.

Where each comfort standard wins on Indian projects

NBC 2016 — AHJ submission baseline. Always cite.

ASHRAE 55 — engineering calculation, LEED EQ credit, NABH healthcare projects. Always cite alongside NBC.

ISO 7730 — global captive projects (Mercedes-Benz, Bosch India plants). Use Category B (PPD ≤ 10 %) as default.

EN 16798-1 — European hotel chain brand standards (Accor, Marriott Europe, Hilton EMEA). Cat II is the default.

Adaptive ASHRAE 55 §5.4 — IGBC EE-1 and LEED EA bonus credit pathways. Mixed-mode hospitality + offices in moderate climate zones. The future of Indian commercial HVAC design.

References

  1. National Building Code of India 2016, Part 8 — Building Services, Section 1 §1.3 (Thermal Comfort Criteria), Bureau of Indian Standards.
  2. ASHRAE Standard 55-2020 — Thermal Environmental Conditions for Human Occupancy, ASHRAE Atlanta.
  3. ISO 7730: 2005 — Ergonomics of the Thermal Environment — Analytical Determination and Interpretation of Thermal Comfort, ISO Geneva.
  4. EN 16798-1: 2019 — Energy Performance of Buildings — Indoor Environmental Input Parameters, CEN Brussels.
  5. ASHRAE 55-2020 Section 5.4 — Adaptive Comfort Model for naturally conditioned and mixed-mode spaces.
  6. de Dear R. and Brager G.S. (2002) — Thermal Comfort in Naturally Ventilated Buildings, Energy and Buildings 34(6).
  7. India Adaptive Comfort Model (Manu, Shukla et al. 2016) — derived from 6,330 field responses in Indian commercial buildings.
  8. IGBC New Buildings v3.0 — IEQ Thermal Comfort credit pathway and EA Bonus credits.

// About the Author

MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE Mumbai chapter member; FSAI affiliate.

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