Green Plumbing & Mechanical Design
Savings In Seattle
by Mike Miazga
April 1, 2011
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Both The Brighton senior campus (pictured) and the Newporter apartments were plagued by energy inefficiencies.
A wall-hung boiler solution benefits two multifamily complexes.
A well-intended retrofit
project on a Seattle-area multifamily complex ended up creating a domino effect
of sorts.
The Newporter apartments in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue (situated across
Lake Washington) was granted federal stimulus money last year for a variety of
improvements, including new insulation,
siding and window weatherization to its buildings.
“It’s an interesting sequence of events,”
notes Dan Gilbert, CEO of
BlueRidge Company.com, a design manufacturing distribution group based
out of Vashon, Wash. (the largest island in Puget Sound).
“I was contacted by a fellow at the housing authority and they wanted me to
come out and have a look. They had this funding to re-insulate, weatherize and
re-side a mid-’60s three-unit complex, but when they did the remodeling, it
triggered another problem with combustion air. All of their aspirating appliances
were working off free air. Now they needed an appliance to draw combustion air
from the outside and exhaust to the outside.”
This new dilemma caused by the structural improvements turned out to be a
blessing in disguise.
“It was not a particularly energy-efficient
building,” says Ecotope Principal Engineer Jon
Heller, P.E., LEED AP. “It was not well-insulated. They had
natural draft appliances and there were a lot of cracks in the building. They
needed to go with something that was sealed-combustion. They had a water
heater, a furnace and a somewhat compromised gas-piping
arrangement.”
Gilbert uses the word “sieve” when describing how he first found the
building.
“As with many of the buildings that were built
prior to the much keener energy-awareness standards, these buildings relied on
the leaks, drafts and cracks for infiltration of combustion air,” he says.
The Solution
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BlueRidge Company.com's Dan Gilbert is shown working on one of the new wall-hung boilers. Both projects benefited from federal stimulus money.
Heller’s company, Ecotope, specializes in energy
efficiency research and consulting and engineering design work for residential
and commercial buildings. They wrote the design-build spec for the King County
Housing Authority and assisted the contractor in understanding the housing
authority’s expectations. He notes there were initial concerns about gas
supply, water supply and space constraints in mechanical areas. Heller audited
and recommended systems and offered options on mechanical technology to solve
concerns, which soon included more insight into inadequate combustion air.
“It’s somewhat unusual in Seattle
to use individual gas water heaters and furnaces
in each apartment in a multifamily building,” he states. “Electric heat and hot
water are a lot more common here in this area. Electricity has historically
been very cheap here because of the hydroelectric power from the Columbia River.”
The solution to the Newporter’s headache was to remove the existing appliances
from each of the 120 1 1/2-bath units in the complex and replace them with a
single Laars Mascot II wall-hung boiler and a custom-made Northland air
handler.
“They had 6-inch fire vents to slide straight down from the roofing system and
drop down into the apartments all in stacks,” Gilbert states. “We pulled out
the forced-air furnace and pulled out the water heater and the exhaust vent and
dropped two 2-inch PVC pipes in the sleeve, one for the exhaust air and one for
the combustion air. We put in an oversized air handler to run at low
temperatures and fan speed. We were able to get high-efficiency appliances in
the units.”
The combustion air situation became a chief concern, Heller notes, once
building envelope repairs were completed.
“They didn’t have the option of leaving in
the existing natural-draft appliances,” he states. “They replaced all the
windows that caused combustion air problems and might have caused CO2
problems. There was not enough air for the combustion. It would probably be
dumping into the units. Whenever you turn on the exhaust fan it would be
pulling down the stack.”
Another option discussed was the use of instantaneous water heaters with
sidebar fan coil units.
“When Dan Gilbert was consulted, he was able to provide a better, more robust
solution with the wall-hung units with internal heat exchangers for domestic
water and fan coils for space,” Heller says. “The solution they offered also
was very price-competitive. The mechanical system solution worked
well.”
Heller adds these types of combustion concerns are commonplace, especially
among multifamily units.
“It’s not uncommon to see these challenges
with building renovations, but we even encounter them occasionally with new
construction,” he states. “Of course, atmospheric combustion is something we
now recommend against, and fortunately the industry is moving in this direction.”
Less Space Required
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Some of the newer appliances in the Brighton complex were saved and used again in the top-floor units. BlueRidge installed 98 new wall-hung boilers.
In addition to energy efficiency, the wall-hung
boilers provided space relief to the Newporter units. However, there were some
initial supply issues.
“For the Newporter project, the 125,000 Btu
boilers were de-rated to 100,000 Btu at the factory,” Gilbert says. “This
allowed for a better fit for the overall gas supply. Each complex group of 40
units had a maximum gas supply of 4 million Btu.”
Integrated flat-plate heat exchangers in the
mechanical rooms run at 3.3 gpm with a 70° rise.
In terms of the space issue, the smaller wall-hung boilers were a welcome
relief to Gilbert and the installation crews.
“The Newporter mechanical closets were shoehorns,” he notes. “They were 2-feet
deep and maybe 4-feet wide. They were really tight mechanical spaces, but it
was easy to vent. They were straight shafts up to the roof designed in a stack
function.”
The installation process, again to the joy of all involved, was swift. The
Newporter job took just three months from inception to completion. Mountlake
Terrace, Wash.-based Blue Flame Comfort was the installer on the
project.
“Usually these things with the housing authority take two to three years to
engineer,” Gilbert notes. “These were all hot swaps. All of the apartments are
occupied so we had to leave the units up and running the same day as they were
installed, so that was an added challenge.”
Can You Help Us Out?
Gilbert explains his crew was about 10 to 15
units into the project when The Brighton senior campus in southeast Seattle got
wind of what was going on in Bellevue.
“They heard what we were doing and asked me
to come over and walk through their building,” he says. “We ended up doing
basically the same system with a little variation. They didn’t have a clean
mechanical shaft drop for the in and out exhaust.”
The Brighton also was using federal stimulus money for its building retrofit
and received additional private funding from the apartment homeowners’ association.
The Brighton originally housed Boeing
employees and their families. The Southeast Seattle Senior Foundation later
bought the facility, which is now a senior living complex.
“They had Obama stimulus money and were doing the weatherizing,” Gilbert
states. “They had the same byproduct with the combustion air issue. When you
eliminate all of the holes in a sieve, you have to find another way to get that
air in. I imagine this is a nationwide problem. People are putting more of an
emphasis on tightening up buildings. When they do that they will need
appliances that will pull combustion air from the outside.”
The Brighton project did not involve a complete overhaul of the units in the
complex. Of the 120 units in the facility, 98 received the new wall-hung
boilers. Seattle-based Olson Energy was the installer.
“They salvaged the best appliances and put
those on the top floor for easy venting. They wanted to save money,” Gilbert
states. “We did the basement and first and second floors, and they did the
third floor with the appliances they pulled out of the building. They had an
eclectic group of furnaces from the 1960s all the way up to fairly decent
appliances.”
The Brighton mechanical rooms were a bit roomier, but still presented tight
working conditions.
“The beauty of it is these units are wall-mounted,” he explains. “The depth is
16 inches and the height is approximately 30 inches and the width is 18
inches.”
Venting at The Brighton complex was not a
complicated process.
“There is a borehole in the roof and the exhaust vent is right there,” Gilbert
says. “There were not floors and floors of exhaust and combustion air issues to
run through.”
Crunching Numbers
The differences in efficiencies between the old
appliances and the newly installed ones are considerable.
“The old furnaces ran at about 75% efficiency and the old water heaters were at
75% to 80% efficiency,” says Gilbert, who adds this particular mechanical
recipe will work well in units up to 200 square feet.
“We replaced those with 95% efficiency appliances. They are not sucking air out
of the building and not throwing previously heated air up the stack to generate
more heated air.”
Additional cost benefits involved with the project include the elimination of
water heaters leased from the local power company. “That’s another bill
removed,” Gilbert says. “You have an immediate benefit of throwing those water
heaters to the curb.”
Both buildings also have metering in each individual mechanical
room.
“If a guy
has six apartments in New York running off a common boiler, he
gets wiped out if a tenant decides to leave the windows and the doors open all
winter. The tenant has no regard for the cost of the utility,” Gilbert says.
“When you put in an individual boiler and an individual meter, the tenant is
much more responsible about fuel. That’s the beauty of these wall-hung units,
and they are particularly adaptable to forced air, floor heating and
radiators.”
Heller feels both complexes will notice substantial monetary savings with the
new mechanical setup.
“I think their energy bills are going to be less than half,” he states.
Gilbert adds: “The bills are going to come down substantially. It’s a
collective group of work here. They have eliminated the air leaks and now have
high-efficiency appliances. This was a vertical learning curve for everybody
that was very successful.”
Mike Miazga
miazgam@bnpmedia.com
Mike Miazga is the senior editor of pme. He can be reached at 847/405-4056.
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