ASHRAE bestows Technology Awards to outstanding building projects

Read about project winners in the Heath Care, Commercial Building, Institutional Building, Public Assembly, and Industrial Facilities or Processes categories.

By Consulting Specifying Engineer Staff February 14, 2008

ASHRAE announced its Technology Award winners at the Winter Meeting held in New York in January. Technology Awards recognize successful applications of innovative design that use ASHRAE standards for energy management, indoor air quality, and mechanical design management technology.

Technology Awards are given in seven categories: Commercial Buildings (new and existing); Institutional Buildings (new and existing); Health Care Facilities (new and existing); Industrial Facilities or Processes (new and existing); Public Assembly (new and existing); Residential (new and existing); Alternative or Renewable Energy Use. For each category a first, second, and honorable mention winner may be named.

Below are five of the Outstanding Technology Award winners and projects:

Honore-Mercier Hospital: Laurier Nichols, PE, Rejean Blais, Simon Pelletier, PEng, Oanh Nguyen, Jean Molina, and Marco Freitas, Montreal, receive first place in the existing Health Care Facilities category for their rehabilitation of Honore-Mercier Hospital, Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada.

In April 2003, a serious aspergillus contamination was discovered. The situation required decontamination and rehabilitation while continuing to provide functional hospital services. The project required temporary relocation of 300 beds to an adjacent hospital that had not been used since the 1990s. It also required use of 60,000 sq. ft of temporary facilities for other hospital services.

The team provided integrated solutions where energy efficiency and the principles of sustainable development were determining criteria for selection of designs based on a lifecycle cost approach. This led to reduction in natural gas consumption and to a high-performance building whose greenhouse gas emissions have been reduced by 3,576 tons per year.

Springhill Suites: Albert Barfield, marketing principal with Gulf Power Co., Pensacola, Fla., receives first place in the new Commercial Buildings category for his project work of Springhill Suites, Pensacola, Fla.

This hotel on a barrier island on the Florida Gulf Coast uses a hybrid geothermal system. The system features a 150-ton closed-loop evaporative fluid cooler. The loop field is set up in parallel with the 150-ton fluid cooler, which offers considerable heat rejection control and redundancy. The primary domestic water heaters are three each, five horsepower water-to-water geothermal heat pumps. All pool and spa heating is provided by geothermal heat pumps. In addition, more than 300 tons of room unitary, ducted geothermal heat pumps are used in guest suites and in other conditioned areas of the hotel.

Overall annual energy intensity for this hybrid geothermal hotel is 79 kBtu/sq.ft, which is 37% below the 1995 Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survey intensity for the lodging segment national average of 135 kBtu/sq.ft. By comparison, another hotel in the same geographic location but with air source equipment operates at an annual energy intensity of 139 kBtu/sq.ft.

Fossil Ridge High School: Craig Watts, principal/vice president of MKK Consulting Engineers, Greenwood Village, Colo., receives first place in the new institutional buildings category for his design of Fossil Ridge High School, Fort Collins, Colo.

Functioning as a small community in itself, the high school has several different types of mechanical systems ranging in size from small DX split systems for computer room cooling to large air handlers with energy recovery devices for spaces such as the auditorium.

When operated together as a package, these components provide the school with an innovative and energy-efficient mechanical system. The demand-controlled classroom ventilation via occupancy sensors and window sensors allows for reduced energy consumption by eliminating the treatment of unneeded outside air, while providing occupants with the ability to bring in naturally ventilated outside air when they feel it is appropriate.

The dollar value of the energy savings from the mechanical, plumbing, irrigation and building lighting systems projected over the life span of the building is estimated at more than $6 million at current utility rates.

Firstenburg Community Center: Rick Grove, PE, senior engineer with Stantec Consulting, Seattle office, receives first place in the new public assembly category for his design of Firstenburg Community Center, Vancouver, Wash.

The community center is a two-story, 72,500-sq.-ft, multi-use facility that includes a fitness area, aquatics space, meeting rooms, lounges, administration areas and a gymnasium with an elevated jogging track.

The majority of the spaces use either natural ventilation, assisted ventilation or a hybrid system. Two 97% thermally efficient natural gas condensing boilers, each sized to 50% of the full heating requirement, provide heating water for domestic, pool, building skin and ventilation heating loads. Another sustainable feature is that gray water collected from the pools’ backwash filters is captured for use in flushing toilets, decreasing the amount of water introduced into the municipal sanitary system by some 500,000 gal per year.

Thermal analysis models were developed to validate the natural ventilation design. An energy model of the building based on construction documents and documented actual operating assumptions showed 26% energy savings as compared to a Washington state baseline model.

Charoen Pokphan Foods Public Co.: Apichit Lumlertpongpana, managing director, and Wichai Rungruangprug, engineering manager, I.T.C., Bangkok, receive first place in the new industrial facilities or processes category for his design of Charoen Pokphan Foods Public Co., Chokchai, Thailand.

The design focused on a refrigeration system and low-temperature air conditioning for a poultry slaughter and processing plant, with a slaughter capacity of 360,000 birds per day.

By installing smaller compressors, smaller suction pipes and insulation material, the system saves some $200,000 of the first cost of equipment and material. The estimated annual energy savings is nearly $300,000 a year, with an estimated total reduction of carbon dioxide emissions equal to 1,900 metric tons per year. Water usage was reduced by 91.3%.