Renters and homeowners alike have used programmable thermostats for years. In fact, “Time-of-day” thermostats have been around for 20 years or so. These programmable, setback thermostats are a sound investment, with abundant returns. Utility companies aggressively promote them. In spaces with scheduled occupancy, like homes and offices, thermostats can be programmed to heat or cool more aggressively based on the clock and the calendar.
Most homeowners and renters have set up heating and cooling schedules based on when they’re typically home and typically away at work or school. This technology has survived this long because it is so effective. Not only at home and at your office, but at your neighborhood auto repair shop, book store, and workout center.
That said, there is still a misunderstanding about “occupancy-based” thermostats. Some people still think of them as just another kind of programmable setback thermostat. We’ve got to set the record straight.
Let’s start by talking about what it’s NOT. An occupancy-based thermostat is NOT a “time-of-day” thermostat.
“Time-of-Day” Thermostats
Clock and calendar are the keys. In spaces with scheduled occupancy, like homes and offices, thermostats can be programmed to heat or cool more aggressively based on the clock and the calendar. Most homeowners and renters set up heating and cooling schedules based on when they’re typically home and when they’re typically away at work or school. It’s lasted this long because it works very effectively
Do you know where this technology DOESN’T work very well? In spaces with unscheduled occupancy like hotels. And it doesn’t work all that well in spaces where, quite frankly, the occupants are controlling the temperature but aren’t paying the utility bills, like college dorms, MDU’s (multi-dwelling units which are growing in popularity, especially in larger US cities), assisted living facilities, and military barracks.
Solution: Occupancy-Based Thermostats
In these spaces (dorms, MDU’s, hotels, etc.) there’s a solution that works exceptionally well: occupancy-based thermostats. They receive occupancy data in real-time. These thermostats rely on PIR sensors, especially those detecting both light and heat, that are calibrated to extreme sensitivity. These unobtrusive sensors are capable of detecting occupancy and distinguishing between occupants, spinning fan blades, and the Boston terrier. Some sensors can even detect sleeping occupants: those who are moving very little but still radiate body heat.
These sensors transmit real-time occupancy data to the thermostat, which acts accordingly to heat or cool a space to maintain a setpoint temperature when a room is occupied, letting it drift when no one is there.
PIR sensors can be built right into the thermostats. They can also be separate devices that communicate wirelessly with the thermostat, especially in larger or multi-room spaces.
So, what’s the source of the confusion? Although our industry sweet-spot is the commercial market, occupancy-based thermostats only relatively recently hit the home market, with Nest, EcoBee, and others. Before that, the general population was not familiar with them or had heard disparaging reports about how they did not work. That lack of awareness is a holdover from the home market.
Occupancy based thermostats are much more effective and successful in our target markets than in homes. Why is this? It’s because homes are large, multi-room spaces. In order to sense occupancy anywhere in the home, occupancy sensors are needed in every single room on every floor and even in hallways. On the other hand, dormitories, hotel rooms, military barracks, and other similar spaces are smaller, and most require only one sensor. And since hallways are part of the public space, they don’t need to detect occupancy. The smaller the space, the more accurate occupancy detection is. And that’s a pretty sweet spot for us to be in.
There are still claims that occupancy-based thermostats don’t work. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. It is a common myth that we continue to dispel to this day. We’ve collected years of data and analytics from hundreds of thousands of reporting devices, which prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that occupancy-based thermostats save energy. Period.
To learn more about how successful occupancy-based thermostats can be in saving energy in the commercial market, contact a Telkonet sales representative today at sales@telkonet.com or 888-703-9398.