Chilled Beams vs VAV vs 4-Pipe FCU — HVAC Distribution Choice for Indian Commercial
By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · HVAC · 11 May 2026
Reading time ~ 9 min · Originally published: 01 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026
On a 32-floor BKC office, 4-pipe FCU costs ₹24.5 Cr capex and ₹4.9 Cr annual O&M. Active chilled beams + DOAS costs ₹31.6 Cr capex but delivers two additional rentable floors worth ₹12 Cr in revenue and ₹4.4 Cr lower 15-year LCC. The architectural decision to lock 4.0 m floor-to-floor heights at concept stage rules out beams before the MEP analysis runs. Three architectures, five DBR locks, real numbers for Indian commercial.
Three air-distribution systems for Indian commercial
The air-side decision on a typical 50,000 m² Indian office plate comes down to three architectures: traditional 4-pipe FCU (chilled and hot water at each terminal, latent control via electric or condensate reheat), VAV (central AHU with variable-volume terminals + reheat), or active chilled beams plus a dedicated outdoor air system (DOAS). Each one solves a different combination of capex, opex, latent control, and floor-to-floor depth.
Where each architecture wins on Indian projects
| Selection driver | 4-pipe FCU | VAV + reheat | Active chilled beams + DOAS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Capex (₹/m² conditioned) | 3,800-4,200 | 4,200-4,800 | 5,000-5,600 |
| Annual cooling energy (kWh/m²) | 165-180 | 140-160 | 115-130 |
| Annual fan + pump kW share | 35 % | 30 % | 15 % (DOAS only) |
| Latent / dehumid control | Excellent | Good (with reheat) | Excellent (DOAS) + sensible at beam |
| Tropical-monsoon humidity tolerance | Best | Good | Best (DOAS handles all latent) |
| Floor-to-floor savings | None | 100-150 mm (smaller riser) | 200-300 mm (no duct return) |
| Acoustic performance | 55-65 NC at supply | 40-50 NC | 30-35 NC (silent beam) |
| Tenant fit-out flexibility | High | Medium | Low (beam placement fixed) |
| Maintenance complexity | Moderate (filter + drain pan) | High (VAV box motors) | Low (no moving parts at beam) |
| Indian vendor density | High (every OEM) | Medium-High | Low (Trox + Frenger + Caverion) |
Why most Indian projects still default to FCU (and when they shouldn’t)
4-pipe FCU dominates Indian commercial because: lowest capex, broadest vendor support, mature electrician + plumber skill base, easy retrofit. The arguments to switch to VAV or chilled beams gain weight in three project contexts:
- High-rise (> 60 m floor plate): chilled beams save 250 mm per floor; on 30 floors that is 7.5 m of usable height — one extra rentable floor. Capex recovers in 2-3 years.
- Sustainability-driven (LEED Platinum, IGBC 6+star, Net Zero): chilled beams + DOAS hits IGBC EE-1 maximum (6 points) easily; FCU struggles.
- Mixed-use with strict NC (Class A office, recording studio, hospital ward): beams operate at 30-35 NC; FCU runs 55-65 NC unless heavily silenced.
A worked 32-floor Mumbai BKC project
32 floors × 1,800 m² leasable = 57,600 m² conditioned. Three system architectures evaluated:
| System | Total capex (₹ Cr) | Annual operating energy (MWh) | Annual O&M (₹ lakh) | 15-yr LCC (₹ Cr) | Net rentable area added (floor count) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-pipe FCU + AHU | 24.5 | 9,500 | 490 | 60.2 | 0 |
| VAV + reheat | 27.8 | 8,500 | 420 | 58.9 | +1 floor (≈ ₹6 Cr revenue uplift) |
| Active chilled beams + DOAS | 31.6 | 7,000 | 370 | 55.8 | +2 floors (≈ ₹12 Cr revenue uplift) |
Chilled beam + DOAS comes out ₹4.4 Cr lower on 15-year LCC, plus delivers two additional rentable floors worth ~₹12 Cr in 30-year revenue. The capex premium of ₹7 Cr is recovered in under 18 months on the rental uplift alone. Yet on most Mumbai projects this analysis is never run because the architect locked the floor-to-floor height at 4.0 m in concept, ruling out beams before the MEP consultant got involved.
Five things we always document in the DBR
- Tropical-monsoon latent load handling — chilled beams need DOAS feeding 12-14 °C dewpoint primary air to prevent condensation. Specify on the BoQ.
- Beam chilled-water supply temperature — 14-16 °C, NOT 7 °C. A separate plant or 3-way valve mixing must be specified.
- Acoustic NC target at design density — must drive both supply and return air-path design.
- Cleaning + access protocol for beam coils — 6-monthly. Architect must agree access panels.
- VFD selection for primary chilled water + DOAS fan — minimum 90 % part-load efficiency at 50 % flow.
References
- ASHRAE Handbook — HVAC Applications 2023, Chapter 4 (Heating and Cooling of Industrial Plants); ASHRAE Atlanta.
- REHVA Guidebook No 5 — Active Chilled Beams in Practice, 2nd Edition, REHVA Brussels 2022.
- ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2022 Appendix G — Performance Rating Method, ASHRAE Atlanta.
- ECBC 2024 Chapter 5 — HVAC + Service Hot Water, BEE GoI.
- ISHRAE Handbook 2024 Chapter 7 — Air Distribution and Diffusion.
- Trox Active Chilled Beam Technical Manual 2024.
- Frenger Active Beam Selection Catalogue 2024.
- NBC 2016 Part 8 §3 — Air Conditioning, Heating and Mechanical Ventilation.
// About the Authors
MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE-affiliated; FSAI-aligned.
