GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Grand Valley State University's Board of Trustees
approved today the conversion of the existing steam system on the Pew
Grand Rapids Campus from the public system to a university owned and
operated system.
James Moyer, assistant vice president for Facilities Planning, said the
$1.2 million project will allow the university to save money and become
more energy efficient.
Grand Valley's downtown DeVos Center and Secchia Hall living center are
currently on the public steam system. Currently, the university buys
steam and has it piped in from the system currently owned by Veolia
Energy North America (and previously owned by Kent County). There is no
return loop on the system, a condition that causes much energy loss when
the hot water and condensed steam is disposed. The university tries to
recover as much of the heat as possible, but sometimes the heated water
has to be cooled down — by mixing it with unheated water the university
purchases — and disposed of through the Grand Rapids sanitary sewer
system.
"That heated water has value to us," Moyer said. "There
is still a lot of energy in that hot water, and that energy is valuable."
The new system will create a closed loop that will re-use the heated
water, allowing the university to control fuel costs and manage energy
needs internally. The system will also result in significant reductions
of energy and costs. Moyer said the change should save the university an
estimated $130,000 annually in fuel costs alone and said the new system
should pay for itself in eight years through cost savings.
The project is expected to create between 15 and 20 jobs. Tower Pinkster
Titus Associates, Inc. is the project engineer and Andy J. Egan Company
is the construction manager and contractor for the project.
GVSU approves new Grand Rapids steam project
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