by Bob Hitchner
April 1, 2011

The original tankless water heater installation at Northridge took six weeks. More tankless installations at the university are currently in the works.
Tankless water heaters lower energy consumption at a Calif. university.
Beverly Watson
can easily laugh about the idea today now that her recent tankless water heater
retrofit project is complete and is fully meeting her
requirements.
But Watson, the associate director of operations for California State
University, Northridge, admits to wondering last summer while the work proceeded
whether eight — as in eight tankless water heaters — were truly enough for her
particular application.
“Frankly, to accommodate the water needs of each of our students, I thought we
were going to need more than that number at each of the four residence halls we
were upgrading,” she says. “So I kept asking the lead engineer on the project:
‘Are you sure we don’t need another tankless water heater or
two?’”
Completed last August, the CSUN project
entailed the complete removal and replacement of the original atmospheric
boilers and storage equipment installed in the four 20-year-old
student-apartment buildings. These rooftop systems provided not only domestic
hot water to the residents of all four structures, but also space heating
through a fan coil in each apartment.
The old boilers no longer had the ability to handle the hot water loads in an
energy-efficient manner and could not meet the rigorous control standards of
the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
In short, it was time for a new solution at
the four buildings, each of which span three or four floors and house 37 to 52
individual living areas for two to four students apiece. The solution specified
by Long Beach, Calif.-based P2S Engineering’s James
Valiensi, P.E., LEED GA, called for each apartment building to
have its own multiple-unit Noritz America tankless water heater system. The
eight units per building would furnish domestic hot water only, with a new and
separate heat pump system handling the space heating.
During the design and installation process, Valiensi reassured his client that
the proper sizing and engineering of the four new tankless systems would meet
the demands of her intended application.
“I liked working for Beverly,” Valiensi says.
“She’s very thorough, does a lot of research and asks a lot of questions
because she wants things done right. She demands not only answers, but also
documentation to support those answers. But like a lot of people, Beverly and
her maintenance staff didn’t realize at first just how much hot water these
tankless water heaters can deliver over a given time span.”
Two other individuals who did their homework on the CSUN project were Bryan Suttles, president of Suttles Plumbing
and Mechanical Corp., and his project manager Dan
Boulais, who quarterbacked the installation. The final rooftop
assembly at each building consists of four pairs of Noritz NCC199 condensing
tankless water heaters mounted back-to-back in two rows onto a custom-made
steel rack. Ruud series 14PJM split system
14 SEER heat pumps and RRHSLHM fan coils in capacities from 1.5 tons to 3 tons
are in the dorm rooms and 4- and 5-ton Ruud Series RRPLB rooftop gas pack
heating and cooling systems are used in hallways and public spaces.
Designed by the P2S Engineering team, including Pasadena, Calif.-based Wheeler
& Gray Consulting Engineers, the racks can handle the required static loads
and seismic forces in accordance with the California Building
Code.
“Suttles Plumbing subsequently enhanced our
design in the process of making it
easier to build,” Valiensi notes.
The installer also decided against erecting these rack structures from scratch
on the four rooftops. Instead, the Suttles Plumbing team chose to prefabricate
them at its shop in Chatsworth, located just a mile-and-a-half from
CSUN.
“Our proximity to the jobsite made this an
ideal approach,” Suttles states. “We built the racks, fixed the water heaters
to them, loaded the racks onto flatbed trailers and shipped them to the four
jobsites. Once there, a crane hoisted the assemblies to the roof. All we had to
do was fasten them onto the same rooftop platforms where the old boilers used
to sit and connect them to the main piping. It all went very smoothly.”
This strategy significantly trimmed installation time.
“By avoiding the time and trouble of
lugging all that material piecemeal up to the roof for assembly — water
heaters, racking, piping, valves and fittings — we were able to cut our overall
labor time in half,” Boulais says.
The installation of tankless water heaters in several student living complexes at Northridge has reduced energy costs by 60% in those buildings.
The gas and water connections on one of the prefabricated tankless racks are shown. The racks were assembled offsite and then lifted ot the rooftop by crane. Installation labor time was cut in half since materials did not have to be carried piecemeal up the roof for assembly.
Watson not only quickly grasped the problem and
its causes, but intends to avoid it in the future by installing new shower
valves whenever retrofitting the domestic hot water system in any residence
hall.
There will certainly be more retrofits at CSUN. Watson recently conducted a
survey of students living in the four apartment buildings and 77% reported
themselves content with the new hot water service. That high percentage
convinced Watson that she had made the right decision in opting for a multiple-unit
tankless solution. Watson notes she is ready to move forward on other CSUN
properties. Boilers in two additional buildings were changed out at the end of
2010 and the university is in the process of installing the tankless units in
two additional buildings. Watson also conducted her first energy-saving
analysis on the new tankless setup vs. the old boiler system and found a 60%
reduction in energy use from the previous year (when still using the original
boilers).
Suttles predicts the popularity of tankless water heaters in commercial
projects such as the CSUN one will only continue to grow.
“The product takes up so much less space than a boiler or commercial water
heater,” he states. “If you can hang it on a wall, it has no footprint at
all.”
Multiple-unit systems offer another advantage to large end users like CSUN,
which simply cannot afford to be without hot water.
“If one unit goes down, you don’t need to
shut off hot water to the entire facility,” Suttles states. “The remaining
units may not be able to meet 100% of the demand, but at least the occupants
have some hot water. In the case of a retail operation, such as a restaurant,
you can keep it open and functioning even while the service work is being done.
That’s why for a commercial installer like myself, tankless is really a
no-brainer.”
Bob Hitchner
Bob Hitchner is the senior vice president, sales, marketing and business development for Noritz.
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