Heating Load for North Indian Buildings: Delhi, Chandigarh, Shimla

India is a cooling-dominated market. But Delhi, Chandigarh, Lucknow, Jaipur, Punjab cities, hill stations (Shimla, Manali, Dehradun, Srinagar, Leh) all carry a real winter heating load that an India-trained HVAC engineer often misses. This article walks through the design winter conditions, steady-state vs degree-day methods, and the radiant + convective system choices that match each climate.

Why heating load is under-represented in Indian practice

Indian HVAC training centres on cooling because:

  • 80 % of population + 90 % of commercial floor area is in cooling-dominated zones
  • Heating equipment (boilers, radiant panels, electric duct heaters) is rare in catalogues
  • Designer reflex is “the same AHU coil with reversal” — which works for VRF heat-pump heating but fails for Shimla-grade load

The reality: a Delhi office runs a real heating load 6-8 weeks per year, Chandigarh 8-10 weeks, Shimla 16-20 weeks. Hill stations run heating for half the year.

Design winter conditions

City Winter design DBT (°C) Indoor design DBT (°C) ΔT (K)
Delhi 5 22 17
Chandigarh 3 22 19
Lucknow 4 22 18
Jaipur 6 22 16
Shimla -2 22 24
Manali -5 22 27
Dehradun 4 22 18
Srinagar -7 22 29
Leh -15 22 37

These are 99.4 % design winter DBT per ISHRAE Handbook (consistent with ASHRAE Climate Design Information for Indian sites).

Steady-state heating load method

Q_heating = U × A × (T_indoor – T_outdoor) + infiltration_load + people + equipment – solar – lights

Note the subtractions: at design winter, lights + equipment + solar are heat gains (reducing heating load). At night peak (often the design hour for residential), gains drop to zero and the heating load is at maximum.

Worked example: 1500 m² Delhi office, 230 mm brick walls (U 1.50 W/m²K), 250 m² double-glazed windows (U 3.0 W/m²K), 1500 m² roof (U 0.40 W/m²K, top floor), 0.5 ACH infiltration:

  • Wall: 1500 m² × 1.50 W/m²K × 17 K = 38,250 W = 38.3 kW
  • Glass: 250 × 3.0 × 17 = 12,750 W = 12.8 kW
  • Roof: 1500 × 0.40 × 17 = 10,200 W = 10.2 kW
  • Infiltration: 1500 m² × 2.7 m × 0.5 ACH × 1.20 × 17 / 3.6 = 11.5 kW
  • Subtotal envelope + infiltration: 72.8 kW

For daytime occupied conditions:

  • People (50 occupants × 75 W sensible): -3.75 kW
  • Equipment (1500 × 12 W/m² × 0.65 use): -11.7 kW
  • Lights (1500 × 9 W/m² × 1.0 use): -13.5 kW
  • Solar (south + east windows at 200 W/m² × 100 m² × 0.3 SHGC effective): -6.0 kW

Net daytime heating load: 72.8 – 35 = 37.8 kW (about 1/2 of nominal cooling for the same building).

For night-time setback (only envelope + infiltration): 72.8 kW.

Degree-day method (annual energy)

Annual heating energy = (UA × HDD × 24) + infiltration × HDD × 24

Where HDD = heating degree-days (base 18°C):

City HDD₁₈ (°C-days/yr)
Delhi 700
Chandigarh 950
Lucknow 850
Shimla 2400
Manali 2900
Srinagar 3300
Leh 5500

For the same Delhi office: UA = 5,460 W/K. Annual heating = 5,460 × 700 × 24 / 1000 = 91,800 kWh/yr.

System architecture by climate

Zone Heating method Notes
Delhi / NCR commercial VRF heat-pump Reverse-cycle from VRF, COP 3.5+ at design winter
Chandigarh / Lucknow VRF heat-pump Same; low compressor frost risk
Shimla / Manali Electric panel + VRF auxiliary Heat pump COP drops to 2.0-2.5 at -5°C; need auxiliary
Srinagar / Leh Hot water radiator + boiler Heat pump impractical at -10°C+; oil/gas boiler standard
Hospitality (any zone) DOAS + chilled beam (cooling) + radiant ceiling (heating) Single 4-pipe distribution

For ECBC compliance, all-electric heating attracts higher source-energy multiplier. Heat pump preferred where COP at design > 2.5.

Frost-defrost on VRF heat-pump

VRF heat-pump in Delhi/Chandigarh: outdoor coil frost forms when OAT drops to ~+2 °C and humidity is moderate. Defrost cycle removes frost via reverse-cycle bursts. Issue: defrost reduces effective heating by 8-15 %. Account for it in capacity selection — pick OEM unit at 90 % rated capacity for the design winter.

In Srinagar/Leh, OAT drops below where frost is typically an issue (frozen + dry), but capacity drops 30-40 % from rated. Sizing must use OEM chart at design OAT.

From the Field — Engineer’s Notebook

On a 2023 Chandigarh corporate HQ, the tenant initially specified VRF heat-pump only for heating, sized at design winter cooling capacity. First winter, occupied at full capacity for 2 weeks of -1 to +3 °C OAT. Indoor temp held at 18-19 °C against 22 °C target — 3-4 K under. Investigation: VRF capacity at 0 °C OAT was 78 % of rated; defrost cycle overhead reduced effective heating to 70 %. Tenant added auxiliary 60 kW electric duct heaters mid-season — at 8x cost of pre-design specification. Lesson: in any Indian zone where OAT drops below 5 °C for 2+ months, plan auxiliary heating (electric or chilled-water reheat) at design.

5 common mistakes

1. Treating heating as “cooling-with-coil-reversal”. Capacity, defrost, COP all change. Run a real heating load calc.

2. Using cooling design winter (24°C indoor + 5°C outdoor — wrong subtraction). Heating ΔT is across the envelope, not summer minus winter.

3. No infiltration boost in heating. Cold air infiltration causes more discomfort than the calc shows; oversize air-curtain or reduce infiltration.

4. No auxiliary in cold-zone projects. VRF capacity at design OAT < 5°C is significantly de-rated.

5. Ignoring stack effect in tall buildings. A 30-storey north-Indian tower has natural stack-driven infiltration in winter that adds 10-15 % to heating load.

Designer’s checklist

  • [ ] Winter design DBT confirmed for the city (ISHRAE Handbook)
  • [ ] Indoor design DBT 22°C (commercial), 24°C (hospitality), 21°C (hospital)
  • [ ] Steady-state heating load computed (envelope + infiltration; subtract gains for daytime; full for night)
  • [ ] Degree-day energy computed for annual operating budget
  • [ ] System architecture matched to climate (heat pump / electric / boiler)
  • [ ] OEM heat-pump capacity de-rated at design OAT
  • [ ] Defrost cycle overhead accounted for (8-15 %)
  • [ ] Auxiliary heating planned for cold-zone projects
  • [ ] Stack-effect infiltration in tall buildings checked
  • [ ] ECBC source-energy multiplier verified for all-electric heating

Pairs with: Cooling Load Methods Compared

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version