January 31, 2018
Journal Article

Automated Point Mapping for Building Control Systems: Recent Advances and Future Research Needs

Abstract

This paper presents a review of recent research and development on methodologies relevant to automating mapping of points in building control systems and between building control systems and external or replacement software and hardware. Manual point mapping is labor intensive and costly, presenting a major impediment to innovations in building control (e.g., automated fault detection and diagnostics, self-healing, and automated commissioning for existing building control systems). The methods reviewed focus on classifying building control system points, especially sensor classifications by sensor type. Fewer publications address other important aspects of the point mapping problem, such as discovering spatial and functional relationships among points, relationships between control system points, physical systems, and equipment, and between various equipment and the systems of which they are part, and discovering metadata, normalizing it to a common namespace, and assigning the metadata to control system points. To motivate further development of new automated point mapping approaches, we identify many research questions organized into three key technical needs: 1) a complete solution and underlying problem formulation, 2) alignment of methods with the actual point mapping problem, and 3) test cases, data sets for testing, explicit test procedures, and consistent performance metrics for reporting testing and evaluation results.

Revised: February 21, 2019 | Published: January 31, 2018

Citation

Wang W., M.R. Brambley, W. Kim, S. Somasundaram, and A.J. Stevens. 2018. Automated Point Mapping for Building Control Systems: Recent Advances and Future Research Needs. Automation in Construction 85. PNNL-SA-123329. doi:10.1016/j.autcon.2017.09.013