Evaporative cooling for London university has low carbon emissions

EcoCooling
Low-carbon cooling for Fyvie Hall at the University of Westminster is provided by EcoCooling evaporative cooling.

EcoCooling evaporative cooling has solved overheating problems at the University of Westminster with a much lower carbon footprint and using less than 20% of the energy that would have been required by a conventional air-conditioning system. Two EcoCoolers and an extraction system were installed to provide cooling for Fyvie Hall and its associated board room.

Fyvie Hall is a listed building dating back to 1912. It hosted the first public viewing of a motion picture and is now used for education and conferences — with a capacity of up to 150 people. The design of the cooling system had to comply with the constraints associated with a Grade 1 listed building.

Two side-discharge EcoCoolers and an extraction system were installed to provide cooling for both rooms. Existing ventilation ducts and openings were used. The air-supply fans were installed with sound attenuation upstream and downstream to meet local restrictions and achieve NC40 indoors.

A combined thermostat and humidistat in each room controls temperature with a maximum relative humidity.

For more information on this story, click here: Oct09, 92
Related links:
Related articles:



modbs tv logo

Industry urged to see Clean Heat Market Mechanism target as opportunity

The UK government has confirmed that the next phase of the Clean Heat Market Mechanism (CHMM) will set an 8% target for the proportion of heat pumps to fossil fuel boiler sales.

2025 CSA Awards winners announced

The Commissioning Specialists Association (CSA) returned to London on the evening of 2nd October for the staging of its 10th Annual Awards Ceremony.