Auraria Higher Education Center
In
the mid-1990s, the Auraria Higher Education Center needed to upgrade energy
systems throughout its downtown Denver campus, home to three colleges and 33,000
year-round students. Most of the lighting in 19 campus buildings was old and
inefficient, and the aging cooling equipment was not meeting the needs of the
campus.
With no money available from the state for capital improvements, Auraria
entered into a performance contract with an energy service company (ESCO) to
make the needed upgrades happen. Keeping buildings cool on extremely hot days
was a particularly difficult problem, and an initial energy audit showed that
the campus's cooling tower was too small. Under the performance contract, the
cooling tower was upgraded to full size and two 20-year-old chillers were
replaced.
The ESCO also retrofitted over 10,000 light fixtures in classrooms, offices,
a parking garage, and the student union building, a process that took three
months to complete. Additional upgrades included installing a new energy
management control system, laboratory fume hoods, and a new heat recovery
system.
Overall, the ESCO spent $2.1 million for upgrades that impacted 1.25 million
square feet of campus space. The ESCO guaranteed $285,000 per year of energy
cost savings over the nine-year life of the performance contract, resulting in a
simple payback period of 7.4 years or less. Savings during the first year after
installation exceeded the guaranteed level. Other benefits of the project
include improved lighting quality for a better learning environment; greater
occupant comfort through improved room temperature control; elimination of the
use of CFCs in the chiller plant; and improved air quality and safety in fume
hood areas. |