Statue of Liberty chills with plastic cooling towers
January 9, 2009
She
has put on a nice face for more than 100 years, welcoming seafarers
to these shores with dignity and grace. But deep down, the Statue of
Liberty was hurting. Standing in the wet, salty environment of New
York Harbor left her interior workings vulnerable to massive
corrosion and malfunction. Something needed to be
done.
Fortunately,
the American icon did not have to suffer in silence for long. Earlier
this year John Culkin, president of C& S Building Services in
Farmingdale, NY, led a team of HVAC technicians to Liberty Island to
install two new cooling towers. The steel-clad towers that had served
the great lady for well over a decade were in a state of rust and
ruin.
“We
needed a corrosion-proof cooling tower. Even the stainless steel
towers they had out there couldn’t survive the elements. All the
fittings and nuts and bolts had rotted out. We wanted a
maintenance-free solution for a wet, salty environment,” said
Culkin.
Two Birds With One Stone
Culkin,
who for eight years has worked with the National Park Service, which
maintains the statue and museum, also had another problem: How to
ferry hefty equipment from the mainland to Liberty Island, which is
about a half-mile south of Ellis Island. If the replacement towers
were too heavy, the rigging fees would skyrocket because a bigger,
more powerful crane would be necessary. A special crane would be
required at the work site. The costs were prohibitive.
Culkin
didn’t need to look far for a solution. Since C&S manages
maintenance and repair activities for a long list of firms, his
travels had brought him in contact with products developed by Delta
Cooling Towers, Incorporated. The firm has been manufacturing factory
assembled, non-corrosive, high-density Polyethylene (HDPE) cooling
equipment since 1971. Culkin knew from experience that the plastic
cooling towers were easy to maintain and impervious to harsh
chemicals, bitter environments and pH deviations. “The
motivating factor was the corrosion-proof aspect. If you look at the
kind of maintenance you have to perform on most cooling towers,
corrosion isn’t going to be your primary issue. Your concerns are
mostly bearings and shafts. But in this case, in New York Harbor,
corrosion maintenance would have been an enormous liability. The fact
that you’re not going to get any corrosion is an enormous savings.
By choosing Delta we greatly reduced those costs.”
The
lightweight plastic towers also solved Culkin’s transportation
dilemma. A normal sized crane could easily lift the equipment to the
deck of a ferry; and the National Park Service zoom boom would
suffice when the C&S team arrived at Liberty Island.
“The
biggest thing is the plastic towers don’t weigh as much as
stainless steel. You don’t need big rigging. That kind of rigging
equipment would be difficult to get to the island. We used the zoom
boom on island to do the lifting. I don’t think there’s another
tower we could have done that with. Otherwise, I would have had to do
it in pieces or bring a crane to island, which would have been very
expensive.”
Extreme Makeover
Culkin’s
five-member team installed a 250-ton Premier tower to cool the museum
at Liberty Island. A smaller 70-ton Paragon tower was chosen to cool
the interior space of the Statue of Liberty. The service technicians
also performed a controls upgrade of the HVAC system and replaced
pumps, disconnect switches, and all the steel piping outside the
statue. The work took about six weeks and was completed in time for
2008 Independence Day activities.
Another
advantage of a plastic tower is its construction. A cooling tower is
basically a giant steel pan, 10- to 50-ft long. Most towers require
continuous support. However, the plastic towers are built into a
steel frame. As a result, less support material is needed. “It’s
fairly simple to install. Normally, you have to buy vibration rails
and provide a means of continuous support at the bottom of a tower.
With the plastic towers, if you have any vibration issues, all you’d
have to do is buy springs.”
Other
significant design advantages include direct-drive Premium Efficiency
fans, a 15-year casing warranty, and various low-maintenance
features. “You’ve got great access to the equipment. It’s
particularly well made.”
John
Flaherty, president of Delta Cooling Tower, is proud to that his
company was asked to come to the rescue of Lady Liberty. Paraphrasing
the famous inscription at the statue site, he said, “Give me your
tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free —
and give me plastic, non-corroding, trouble-free cooling towers. It’s
a special place with some unique space constraints. Fortunately, our
lightweight features helped everything go smoothly.”
“With
the plastic towers you’ll have less down time because maintenance
can be performed quickly. For example, unlike a stainless steel
tower, you’re not going to lose a whole side of a tower due to
rotting. The only emergency outage would be a fan or fan motor. But
the way they make them, those units are easily replaced. It’s only
four bolts, so you can change it and have it up and running
quickly.”
Culkin and company have had no
problems with the new towers since installation. For those who would
scoff, citing the short time the towers have been in operation,
Culkin has a quick reply.
“When you put new
equipment in, usually lots of things go wrong when you first turn it
on. You make your adjustments and from there everything should be
okay. When things go particularly well, there’s not a lot to say.
And that’s how the Delta installation has gone. We’ve had no
issues since the day we turned it on.”
Now
that’s independence. ES
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