DocumentCode
803610
Title
The connected building [Internet connected building control networks]
Author
Quillinan, Justin
Volume
51
Issue
4
fYear
2005
fDate
4/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
44
Lastpage
47
Abstract
Commercial buildings and public venues are often wired up with 20 or more separate networks, responsible for such diverse functions as heating, lighting, ventilation, air conditioning, energy monitoring, fire alarms, and CCTV. Such building control systems have done a decent job for decades. But they are based on proprietary solutions, each with their own local wiring, software and control panels. This article examines the use of a single Internet protocol (IP) based network to carry voice, data, video and wireless information for building control. It details the use of the extensible markup language (XML) that has been developed for data transmission with Internet technologies such as TCP/IP and HTTP. It also describes building control using Web services, often described as middleware or the software ´glue´ that sticks systems together. It concludes by presenting several practical installations using this technology.
Keywords
IP networks; Internet; XML; building management systems; middleware; transport protocols; CCTV; HTTP; Internet connected building control networks; Internet protocol based network; TCP/IP; Web services; XML; air conditioning; data transmission; energy monitoring; extensible markup language; fire alarms; heating; lighting; middleware; ventilation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
IEE Review
Publisher
iet
ISSN
0953-5683
Type
jour
DOI
10.1049/ir:20050405
Filename
1428383
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