• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: zgf architects

Flashback: Stanford University reboots with new Central Energy Facility, a 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Project

By Justine Testado|

Tuesday, Apr 25, 2017

Photo: Tim Griffith.

Stanford University's new Central Energy Facility replaced the school's aging central cogeneration plant, which ran on 100 percent fossil fuel and primarily on electrical power. Designed by a team led by ZGF Architects, the new Central Energy Facility comprises a net-positive energy administrative building equipped with top-notch district heating and cooling technology to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and fossil fuel and water use.

The AIA COTE recently named the facility as one of their 2017 Top Ten Green Projects. Scroll down for more.

Photo: Matthew Anderson.

“In 2011, Stanford University examined options to replace its aging central cogeneration plant, looking holistically at 35-year lifecycle costs, and considering its commitment to carbon neutrality.”

With a total area of 534,019 square feet, the Central Energy Facility, which was completed in 2016, “comprises a net positive energy administrative building, a heat recovery chiller plant, a cooling and heating plant, a service yard, and a new campus-wide main electrical substation.”

Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.
Photo: Robert Canfield.
Photo: Steve Proehl.

“Designed to sensitively integrate into the surrounding campus, the architectural expression is one of lightness, transparency and sustainability to express the facility’s purpose.”

Photo: Robert Canfield.

“It transforms what would be a typical unappreciated energy plant into a classroom and a moment of architectural joy,” the AIA COTE competition jury noted. “A naturally ventilated, daylit work environment is provided for facilities staff who would normally be in a windowless basement. It sets a high bar for a university to provide national environmental leadership and design excellence."

Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.
Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.

“Stanford’s Energy and Climate Plan identified significant and simultaneous needs for both heating and cooling in its buildings due to its diverse programs (including healthcare and research labs) and sophisticated building systems.

Based on this synergy, the Central Energy Facility project replaces the older natural gas-powered cogeneration plant and campus steam loop with an electricity powered ‘regeneration’ plant that supplies hot and chilled water to the campus and hospitals.”

Photo: Robert Canfield.
Photo: Tim Griffith.
Photo: Tim Griffith.

“The waste heat in the chilled water return loop is being ‘recovered’ to supply 93 percent of the heating and hot water required for campus buildings. This singular project reduces overall campus emissions by 68 percent and potable water usage by 18 percent, thereby saving an estimated $420 million over the next 35 years.”

Check out more project diagrams in the gallery. In case you missed them, see more of the 2017 COTE Top Ten Green Projects in the links below.

All photos and quoted text courtesy of the AIA.

RELATED NEWS 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Projects revealed
RELATED NEWS Closer look at Chesapeake Bay Foundation's Brock Environmental Center, the 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Plus honoree

Related

energy ● civic architecture ● aia ● cote top green projects ● cote ● zgf architects ● energy design ● california ● usa ● sustainability ● sustainable design
ZGF Architects LLP
ZGF Architects LLP
Stanford University
Stanford University

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Flashback: Stanford University reboots with new Central Energy Facility, a 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Project

The $10K ZGF Scholarship is now receiving applications

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Flashback: Stanford University reboots with new Central Energy Facility, a 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Project

By Justine Testado|

Tuesday, Apr 25, 2017

Share

Photo: Tim Griffith.

Related

energy ● civic architecture ● aia ● cote top green projects ● cote ● zgf architects ● energy design ● california ● usa ● sustainability ● sustainable design
ZGF Architects LLP
ZGF Architects LLP
Stanford University
Stanford University

Stanford University's new Central Energy Facility replaced the school's aging central cogeneration plant, which ran on 100 percent fossil fuel and primarily on electrical power. Designed by a team led by ZGF Architects, the new Central Energy Facility comprises a net-positive energy administrative building equipped with top-notch district heating and cooling technology to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and fossil fuel and water use.

The AIA COTE recently named the facility as one of their 2017 Top Ten Green Projects. Scroll down for more.

Photo: Matthew Anderson.

“In 2011, Stanford University examined options to replace its aging central cogeneration plant, looking holistically at 35-year lifecycle costs, and considering its commitment to carbon neutrality.”

With a total area of 534,019 square feet, the Central Energy Facility, which was completed in 2016, “comprises a net positive energy administrative building, a heat recovery chiller plant, a cooling and heating plant, a service yard, and a new campus-wide main electrical substation.”

Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.
Photo: Robert Canfield.
Photo: Steve Proehl.

“Designed to sensitively integrate into the surrounding campus, the architectural expression is one of lightness, transparency and sustainability to express the facility’s purpose.”

Photo: Robert Canfield.

“It transforms what would be a typical unappreciated energy plant into a classroom and a moment of architectural joy,” the AIA COTE competition jury noted. “A naturally ventilated, daylit work environment is provided for facilities staff who would normally be in a windowless basement. It sets a high bar for a university to provide national environmental leadership and design excellence."

Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.
Photo courtesy of AIA COTE.

“Stanford’s Energy and Climate Plan identified significant and simultaneous needs for both heating and cooling in its buildings due to its diverse programs (including healthcare and research labs) and sophisticated building systems.

Based on this synergy, the Central Energy Facility project replaces the older natural gas-powered cogeneration plant and campus steam loop with an electricity powered ‘regeneration’ plant that supplies hot and chilled water to the campus and hospitals.”

Photo: Robert Canfield.
Photo: Tim Griffith.
Photo: Tim Griffith.

“The waste heat in the chilled water return loop is being ‘recovered’ to supply 93 percent of the heating and hot water required for campus buildings. This singular project reduces overall campus emissions by 68 percent and potable water usage by 18 percent, thereby saving an estimated $420 million over the next 35 years.”

Check out more project diagrams in the gallery. In case you missed them, see more of the 2017 COTE Top Ten Green Projects in the links below.

All photos and quoted text courtesy of the AIA.

RELATED NEWS 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Green Projects revealed
RELATED NEWS Closer look at Chesapeake Bay Foundation's Brock Environmental Center, the 2017 AIA COTE Top Ten Plus honoree

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Interior Designer

Fowlkes Studio

Interior Designer

Washington, DC, US

Project Manager/architect

MKNH Architects

Project Manager/architect

New York, NY, US

Landscape Architect

EDR - Environmental Design & Research

Landscape Architect

Syracuse, NY, US

Project Architect - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Project Architect - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Architect

KieranTimberlake

Architect

Philadelphia, PA, US

Architectural Designer

7th Street Burger

Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Interior Design Project Manager

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Interior Design Project Manager

Bellevue, WA, US

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

DWY Landscape Architects

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

Sarasota, FL, US

Project Architect

Fowlkes Studio

Project Architect

Washington, DC, US

Design Director or Sr. Architect

b.hills architecture, P.C.

Design Director or Sr. Architect

Boise, ID, US

Next page » Loading