Central cooling system displays sense of style and sustainability
May 2, 2007
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| This central plant, which serves a 140-acre
environmentally conscious, live-work-play village in Atlanta, currently employs
three 2,500-ton dual-compressor centrifugal chillers. When its additional
phases are completed, a 25,000-ton central cooling system will circulate
approximately 40,000 gpm of chilled water throughout the development’s
buildings. |
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Located in midtown
Atlanta on the site of the old Atlantic Steel Mill, Atlantic Station is a
140-acre environmentally conscious, live-work-play village. Among the many
attributes contributing to this development’s green status is the integration
of the region’s most environmentally friendly central cooling system.
Maxon Holdings, LLC, the developer, owner, and
operator of the central cooling system at Atlantic Station, partnered with
Johnson Controls, which provided YORK®
chillers to create the new cooling system. “The entire development will be
about 13 million sq ft,” according to president of Maxon, Marc O’Connor. “We’ll
have about 10 to 12 million sq ft on our central energy plant and maybe two
million sq ft will be residential high-rise condos, hotels, office buildings,
retail buildings, conference center hotels, and the like.”
Miles And Miles
The Atlantic Station development consists of three phases.
Upon completion of the final phase, a 25,000-ton central cooling system will
circulate approximately 40,000 gpm of chilled water throughout a network of
buildings. Several miles of 36-in. and 24-in. chilled water piping installed by
Maxon connect the buildings to the plant. Because the plant operates 24/7 and
is the entire building network’s sole mechanical cooling source, the system’s
operational uptime is paramount.
To ensure Phase I of the chilled water plant met the
critical needs, Maxon designed and built a refrigeration plant consisting of
three 2,500-ton dual-compressor YORK MaxE™ centrifugal chillers. “The next
phase will probably start in ’08,” said O’Connor. This phase may increase the
central cooling system by as much as 9,000 tons, depending upon how fast the
development, as a whole, grows. Phase III will most likely commence in 2012.
LEED® Points And Savings
From an economic perspective, the motivation to balance
physical plant size, refrigeration capacity, operational efficiency, and
capital cost led Maxon to install three YORK Model YD chillers. The chillers
provide excellent unloading capability, minimized floor space usage, and
partial redundancy. They also use HFC-134a refrigerant, and because each
building in the development uses chilled water from the central plant, each
building captures the assigned LEED®
points.
Because the YD chiller uses a single control panel, the
dual-compressor chiller operates as a single chiller with optimized unloading
capability. When system load and/or entering condenser water temperatures
(ECWT) decrease, the control logic allows for optimized sequencing and
unloading of the dual compressors, reducing energy consumption.
Although a district cooling plant in Atlanta will tend to
have a significant base-load, the compressor’s energy consumption is also
influenced by cooling load and ECWT. In fact, even in Atlanta (where the
typical design ECWT is 85°F), tower water temperatures below 80° are available
more than 88% of the time. With reduced ECWT, the chiller can deliver the
design cooling capacity, while consuming a reduced amount of energy.
To realize the full energy savings potential available from
using colder tower water, the YORK MaxE chiller is capable of accepting an ECWT
as low as 55°. While producing 2,500 tons of cooling and receiving 55° ECWT,
the chiller’s efficiency is .47 kW/ton. Operationally, the central plant
incorporates a waterside economizer, thus allowing mechanical refrigeration to
shut down when outside-air conditions support economizer operation. Typically,
transitioning between economizer operation and mechanical cooling operation
happens when tower water temperatures are below 55°.
There For All To See
Maxon also integrated the YORK color graphic display control
panels into the plant’s EMS by directly linking the more than 60 available
control points to the Johnson Controls Metasys® automation system. The finished
product includes plasma display monitors mounted throughout the plant, allowing
operators and visitors to monitor the system’s intricate mechanical operation
from multiple vantage points.
“It’s laid out so
education is a big focus,” said O’Connor. “We have plasma TVs inside the plant
just to gather around to look and educate them [the residents] on what is
working and where water is going and why it does what it does. We actually got
LEED points for our innovation in education for developing a plant that everyone
at the development gets to enjoy.”
The project employs one of the most environmentally friendly
central cooling systems in the Southeast, and serves as an excellent model for
other aspiring green developments. “It doesn’t look like any district energy
plant you’ve seen,” said O’Connor.
“It’s a pretty sexy looking plant with glass
windows and neon lights, and we light up the chillers and cooling towers [at
night], and we have neon signs and plasma TVs. It’s a pretty rock and roll plant.”
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