This study presents a pilot methodological investigation of the thermal performance of a Najdi mudbrick dwelling in Ushaiger, Saudi Arabia, using short-term field monitoring and a preliminary digital-twin inspired workflow. Two field campaigns in August and September 2025 measured indoor and outdoor conditions with a portable weather station under severe site constraints, including lack of electrical infrastructure, restricted access, and the use of consumer-grade sensors. The monitored results indicate that the massive earthen walls attenuated part of the outdoor daily temperature swing, but indoor conditions remained very hot: in August, indoor temperatures averaged 38.1 °C, compared with 40.2 °C outdoors, and in September, indoor temperatures averaged 36.3 °C, compared with 36.1 °C outdoors. A simplified IDA ICE model was compared with the monitored indoor temperature over the available windows, and a post-processing affine bias adjustment was tested only as a diagnostic short-window correction rather than as a transferable calibration. Monte Carlo sensitivity analysis was used in an exploratory way. It examined how passive envelope and boundary-related parameters influenced simulated indoor relative humidity, with infiltration emerging as the dominant factor affecting relative humidity dynamics; peak indoor relative humidity increased from about 67% at 0.15 air changes per hour (ACH) to more than 74% at 0.60 ACH, whereas wall thickness had a modest buffering effect. Given the short monitoring duration and field limitations, the study is not presented as a fully validated digital twin but as a feasibility-oriented workflow that combines constrained in situ monitoring with exploratory simulation to support future, longer-term conservation and adaptive reuse research on earthen heritage in hot–arid climates.
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Mazzetto et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893eb6c1944d70ce04d68 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073634
Silvia Mazzetto
Prince Sultan University
Mohammed Mashary Alnaim
University of Ha'il
Sustainability
Prince Sultan University
University of Ha'il
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