The U.S. Green
Building Council has just awarded DC's new Dunbar Senior High School—designed
by a joint venture between Perkins Eastman Architects, Setty &
SK&A. —an unprecedented 91
LEED credits, breaking the previous LEED for Schools record by 5 credits. The largest portion of these earned credits
came from the LEED category EAC1 (Optimization of Energy Performance), in which
the new building's design earned an impressive 18 of 19 possible points,
indicating that the School, opened in 2013, is projected to save from 46% to
48% in energy costs with respect to an ASHRAE-established baseline building
performance rating. These savings are
being accomplished through an array of energy conservation measures, including
a geothermal well field (DC's largest), PPA-acquired solar panels, radiant
flooring, an advanced lighting system with dimmable ballasts, and a rainwater
harvesting system.
Thursday, 19 February 2015
Saturday, 14 February 2015
Proving Emerging Chiller Technologies
SETTY, a leader in the field of high performing buildings, was recently chosen
by the General Services Administration(GSA) to provide MEP design, controls integration, and commissioning services
for an innovative 12-month comparison study of competing chiller
technologies. This effort is part of the
GSA's Green Proving Ground (GPG)
program, which is evaluating emerging building technologies in real-world
settings and providing recommendations for their deployment across GSA's nationwide
real estate portfolio. The study site is
the 5 story, 133-year-old Sidney Yates Building, located near the National Mall
in Washington, D.C.
A joint effort between SETTY, Maryn Construction, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, this
ongoing study is evaluating the technical performance and cost effectiveness of
a variable-speed screw chiller compressor,
one of only nine emerging technologies selected in 2014 for GPG
evaluation. The baseline for comparison
is being provided by a magneticlevitation (Maglev) chiller compressor, a proven technology that was the
subject of a 2013 GPG study. Two chiller
units—one variable-speed screw and one Maglev, both having identical
capacity—are being installed side by side in the Yates building, and
performance metrics for both units will be carefully monitored for the duration
of the study.
Setty's engineers and commissioning experts are leveraging their
expertise in high performing building design to ensure that the two competing
chillers are installed in a manner that allows for a fair performance
comparison and that efficiently serves the cooling needs of the approximately 200,000 sf Yates building. From field survey to design of new water pumps,
variable frequency drives, a new advanced energy metering system, and a new
central plant BAS, our engineers are customizing the installations to allow
each chiller to operate at optimal efficiency.
Tuesday, 3 February 2015
The SETTY Survey Team at NIST
Under our NIST IDIQ, SETTY is developing a full blown design to fix the problems of the Toxic Gas Monitoring System in the Advance Measurement Laboratory at NIST. Pictured in the required lab protection gear, the SETTY survey team has been working on solutions to fix the monitoring system that has been riddled with problems.
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