flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Sprinkler system does double duty

Great Solutions

Sprinkler system does double duty

Two innovations tap into the multi-use potential for fire/life safety infrastructure.


By BD+C Staff | January 12, 2016
Sprinkler system does double duty

Photo: Industrial Technology Research Institute.

For years, MEP engineers have debated the untapped potential lying within the walls and ceilings of virtually every modern commercial building: fire protection piping. Building owners sink a hefty sum into fire sprinkler infrastructure. Why not tap into this water distribution network for other uses, like toilet flushing?

Until recently, code officials have told Building Teams “hands off,” for fear of jeopardizing the integrity of these critical systems. But they are slowly coming around.

Two recent innovations are indicative of the trend. The first, the Fluid-Driven Sprinkler Light, utilizes a water turbine micro-generator with high-illumination LED light engines to provide emergency lighting without the need for batteries or other power sources (pictured above). Developed by the Industrial Technology Research Institute, the technology can provide for safer access and egress during fires, when buildings are engulfed by smoke. 

High temperatures activate the sprinklers, and the flow of the water generates electricity to power the LEDs, which project a laser-based holography pattern light. The lights can be positioned to illuminate evacuation routes.

For the $29 million, four-level addition to the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research Expansion, in Ann Arbor, the engineering team, led by MEP engineer Peter Basso Associates, utilized the building’s fire protection piping system to distribute chilled water to the chilled beams (pictured, below). The dual-function design eliminated approximately 70% of the piping normally associated with a chilled beam system, and reduced first cost by an estimated $500,000.

It is the first installation of its kind in the U.S., and it required that all components of the combined fire protection/chilled beam system be rated for a minimum 175 PSIG (pounds per square inch gage) operating pressure, according to Brian Runde, PE, LEED AP, VP with Peter Basso Associates. He says using chilled beams helped the project reduce overall building energy use by 37.2% versus an ASHRAE 90.1-compliant building.

 

Photo: Peter Basso Associates

Related Stories

Great Solutions | Nov 8, 2018

Public canopy system can be reconfigured by drones on the fly

The installation combines cyber-physical building materials constructed from lightweight carbon fiber filament with a collection of autonomous drones.

Great Solutions | Sep 28, 2018

When pigs fly? How about when cows float?

Merwehaven Harbor in Rotterdam will be home to the world’s first floating farm.

Great Solutions | Sep 17, 2018

Curtain walls go circadian

Catering to our natural circadian rhythm is a task designers are taking to heart.

Great Solutions | Aug 8, 2018

Warehouses rise up to serve downtown

Multistory industrial buildings provide the best chance at keeping up with the rapid growth of e-commerce in North America.

Great Solutions | Jul 13, 2018

Fungus may be the key to colonizing mars

A Cleveland-based architect and a NASA Ames researcher have a novel idea for building on Mars.

Great Solutions | May 14, 2018

It’s not Ripley’s loader, but this industrial exoskeleton makes physical labor a breeze

SuitX modules can be used separately or combined to form a full-body exoskeleton.

Great Solutions | Apr 5, 2018

IAQ monitoring for all

San Francisco startup Bitfinder debuts a commercial-grade version of its air quality monitoring system.

Great Solutions | Mar 9, 2018

Forget the wall thermostat: Wear one on your wrist instead

The Embr Wave Wristband acts like a personal thermostat and could become a user-friendly component in building energy-saving strategies.

Great Solutions | Feb 8, 2018

Stackable steel modules speed building core construction

With this patented, steel-and-concrete hybrid system, the service core will no longer be the schedule bottleneck on new construction projects.

Great Solutions | Jan 10, 2018

Blue lagoon technology brings the beach anywhere in the world

From coastal resorts to inner cities, these large-scale clear-water lagoons offer a slice of paradise.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021