An ambitious experiment in Fort Collins, Colo., is supporting development of the nation’s first major urban zero-energy district. The Zero Energy District (ZED) project composed of five businesses was able to cut its peak-load energy demand more than 20% over four weeks. The long-term goal of a ZED is for power users to produce as much energy in a year as they collectively need to draw from the grid. A key element of a ZED entails having the utility signal the customer to cut back usage—such as intermittently shutting down air conditioning or heating of certain spaces—when the ZED’s overall demand approaches peak levels. The participants installed smart energy meters and other control mechanisms, giving access to data that monitored electricity usage and pricing.
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NIST recommends tougher standards for tornado resilience
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| Dec 10, 2013
Whistleblowers can now file complaints online with OSHA
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| Dec 4, 2013
Five U.S. cities leading on climate change initiatives
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| Dec 4, 2013
Philadelphia City Council mulling bill requiring ID cards for construction workers
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| Dec 4, 2013
Changes completed on 2015 IECC provisions
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| Dec 4, 2013
Design-build makes gains along with more authorizing legislation
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| Dec 4, 2013
Rotterdam resiliency policies include floating neighborhood
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| Dec 4, 2013
Meet the 'world's greenest building': One Angel Square
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| Dec 3, 2013
Architects urge government to reform design-build contracting process
Current federal contracting laws are discouraging talented architects from competing for federal contracts, depriving government and, by inference, taxpayers of the best design expertise available, according to AIA testimony presented today on Capitol Hill.