Eliminating CFCs and improving efficiency at the Bank of America
San Francisco`s Bank of America building is a 1.5-million-square-foot landmark with an annual electric load of over 30 million kWh. The building`s co-owner and property manager, The Shorenstein Company, has phased out CFCs, reduced the size of its chillers by 30 percent, and improved central plant efficiency by over 32 percent. Central chiller plant upgrades, lighting retrofits, and variable-frequency motor drives have reduced overall building electricity consumption by about 10 percent. In addition to these savings, a real-time pricing strategy has helped Shorenstein to bring down the overall cost of electric power, reducing the building`s 1994 electric bill by nearly $300,000. The experiences at Bank of America demonstrate the opportunity available for many centrally cooled facilities to eliminate CFC refrigerants, reduce plant size, and dramatically improve overall system efficiency. Even without the reduction in cooling load afforded by energy efficient lighting upgrades, many central plants are sufficiently oversized from the onset that retrofitting with smaller and less expensive chillers becomes practical. The Bank of America also demonstrates the benefit of retrofitting with chillers of different sizes which allows staging of chiller capacity to efficiently meet varying cooling loads.
- OSTI ID:
- 55566
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: DN: Case study 95-1; PBD: 1995
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS
AIR CONDITIONING
ENERGY CONSERVATION
CALIFORNIA
CHLOROFLUOROCARBONS
MATERIAL SUBSTITUTION
AIR CONDITIONERS
SIZING
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
LIGHTING SYSTEMS
ELECTRIC MOTORS
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ELECTRIC POWER
RETROFITTING