January-February 2007

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Twenty-Two Floors of Energy Efficiency

An innovative office building takes advantage of the "spark spread"—the difference between the price of natural gas and the cost of electricity.

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By George Leposky

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As southern California struggled last summer with sweltering heat and staggering demand for electricity, a new cogeneration system eased the strain for the 550 North Brand Boulevard Building in downtown Glendale. By burning natural gas to generate electricity and capturing waste heat from that process to chill water for air conditioning, the cogeneration system—completed in December 2005—cut the building’s energy costs and gave it a margin of safety when grid power was strained. In case of a grid-power failure, the system can maintain the building’s essential functions and those of offices where tenants have paid to receive standby power.

The 22-story structure stands two blocks south of the Ventura Freeway (“the 134”), the main east-west artery through downtown Glendale. Built in 1987, the building has 284,000 square feet of interior space and a 289,000-square-foot parking garage. Its 30 tenants, primarily financial-services and legal firms, include Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., National TeleConsultants Inc., and the Smith Barney division of Citigroup Global Markets Inc.

The building is owned by 550 North Brand Owners Corp., which in turn is owned by a pension fund that employs Morgan Stanley Real Estate as real-estate investment advisor. SHM Partners (formerly Smith, Hricik & Munselle Management Co.) continues to manage the property, which it sold in 1990.

Weston Munselle, the SHM partner responsible for onsite management of 550 North Brand, says the cogeneration installation is part of “a demonstrable strategy of reducing consumption and reducing the unit cost of utilities. It ends up as a financial benefit to the building and to the tenants, and an environmental benefit to the world around us.”

In coastal California, a differential between the price of natural gas and the price of electricity has long existed. Natural gas is domestically produced, readily available, and often used by the power companies to produce electricity. “Our cogeneration system takes advantage of the ‘spark spread’—the differential between the price of natural gas and the cost of electricity,” Munselle says.

Surprising Agreement
Northern Power, a Waitsfield, VT-based division of Distributed Energy Systems Corp. in Wallingford, CT, designed and installed the cogeneration system. “We put in the initial interconnect application in December of 2003,” says Jan Tierson, project engineer and lead electrical engineer.

That application went to the city of Glendale’s municipal utility, Glendale Water & Power, which generates, transmits, and distributes electricity to 75,341 residential, commercial, and industrial customers. At 550 North Brand, two GWP service transformers feed the building, and one supplies almost twice as much power as the other—a situation with ominous implications.

“For cogeneration, you need to run a generator at no less than 75% of its rating for best efficiency. The disparity would lead toward unequal-sized units or decreased run time, which wouldn’t recoup as much cost,” explains Dan Lenel, lead mechanical and controls engineer for Northern Power.

“We proposed to GWP that we share power between the two services, and they agreed—surprisingly. Their attitude was that the utility was there to serve the customers. They allowed us to distribute power over a portion of their equipment within the building to balance the load, which we did through monitoring and controls, with no changes in the distribution-system hardware. Because you’re providing power to the combined service load rather than an individual service load, the number of hours you can operate a single genset is increased.”

This is the first cogeneration plant in GWP’s territory, but Lenel says utility officials “understand the environmental importance of cogeneration for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and utilizing waste heat. Most utilities lose revenue because of cogeneration, because they’re providing less electricity than before, but GWP wasn’t looking at it just from a revenue standpoint. Their willingness to let us combine the services and export power between the two services made a huge difference in the viability of the project.”

The generators are fueled by natural gas via underground pipes.

Equipment and Construction
The cogeneration system includes two gensets, each rated at 375 kW, with Waukesha H24GSID engines and Stamford HCI 534C generators; a Cention AR-D240L2 absorption chiller with a 240-ton nominal capacity; and an Evapco UBT 12-612B cooling tower with a capacity of 1,350 gallons per minute.

To fuel the generators, Southern California Gas Co. supplies natural gas through underground pipes; no gas is stored onsite. Because of the extra cost of the equipment and diesel-fuel storage facilities, dual-fuel generators weren’t installed.

“It’s a question of cost benefit,” Lenel says. “How much is a customer willing to pay for what level of redundancy and backup? To have power assured 100% of the time, there’s a cost associated with that. The likelihood of an electric outage is higher than the likelihood of a gas outage. For the building owner, using this cogen system as a standby power system is a reasonable expense. During the Northeast blackout, many offices in New York City were out for longer than their uninterruptible power supplies could handle the interruption. With a standby power system such as this, their servers and data wouldn’t have been disrupted.”

Construction took about a year. The dry weight of each generator was 7,200 pounds. They arrived on skids, and an 820-square-foot room in the basement of the parking garage was built around them. The absorption chiller weighed 19,000 pounds on arrival. With its associated pumps and the cooling tower, it occupies a 310-square-foot fenced area in the garage basement.

“The installation sacrificed six parking stalls,” Munselle says.

How It Works
The generators produce 3.676 million Btu (equal to 1,077 kW) of waste heat per hour—the absorption chiller’s energy source. Like a household refrigerator, the absorption chiller operates by evaporating and condensing a refrigerant fluid under varying degrees of pressure. Unlike a typical refrigerator, however, the absorption chiller lacks a compressor; its internal pressure variations are due to temperature variations and the chemical attraction between absorbent and refrigerant compounds.

The absorbent agent in this chiller is lithium bromide, a compound with properties similar to those of common salt (sodium chloride). The refrigerant is water.

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The engines’ waste heat goes from their water jackets into a high-temperature, heat-recovery water heater, a closed hot-water loop that supplies the heat to a generator vessel to boil a diluted solution of lithium bromide and water. Boiling concentrates the lithium bromide and releases water vapor, which enters a condenser.

In the condenser, a cooling-water loop from the cooling tower cools and condenses the water, which flows into an evaporator. There it vaporizes at about 42°F. due to reduced pressure and the transfer of heat from the chilled-water inlet, circulating 45°F water back to the air handlers. Next Page >

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