July-August 2009

Medical Power Practices

Case studies in standby emergency power

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Photo: @iStockphoto.com/Maksymka

By Lori Lovely

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The budget-saving move meant that the hospital, which increased both its square footage and load, got the newer generators, while its three 1,200-kW generators were relocated to the MRB, which required no additional capacity. The MRB project installed new feeders to the existing generators instead having to install a generator plant on the roof of the new building.

The fact that the existing 1200s were located under the plaza that separated the hospital and the MRB helped in making the decision, Ross believes. “We had a lot of problems figuring out the MRB generators. Since the 1200s were actually in a location accessible to the MRB, it made a lot of sense to put the money for new generators into the hospital and let the MRB utilize the existing ones.”

In the end, the MRB acquired good gensets that are easily serviceable just below grade—as opposed to being placed on the roof—and the hospital got better reliability with the new generators. “The hospital has a critical need, so it made more sense to put the new generators there,” he says. “This plan allowed us to consolidate some, without putting any on the roof.”

There’s even room for growth. Ross indicates that two spaces in the Highbay area are left. One is intended for backfeed to eliminate two or three generators in the parking deck, although he says it hasn’t happened yet because the hospital keeps adding load. He says Vanderbilt is adding a fifth generator in its first expansion. Chris Buckner, with VUMC’s Office of Space and Facilities Planning, told Caterpillar that he expects a sixth unit in 2009, in addition to replacement of two aging gensets.

Photos: John Ross
 "We view technology as an asset to facilitate even better care for hospital patients."

Caterpillar proposed their ISO paralleling gear as a packaged solution for the plant.

Challenging Moves
Although the project won awards and plenty of notice, Ross says it wasn’t always easy. “Noise was an issue,” he states.

On the urban campus, the 11-story brick and glass hospital isn’t far from the clinic. The team was concerned that the noise from the generators that are located at street level and facing the hospital would bounce between the buildings, Ross explains, disrupting the patients and staff. Compounding the problem is the fact that air is drawn in from the parking deck, with radiators blowing it out at street level.

To mitigate noise issues, they installed sound attenuators on the radiators and intake louvers to reduce the amount of noise going into the garage and out to the street. In addition, he says they used oversized radiators to account for slowing the air down for a full heat exchange.

“We utilized an existing elevator shaft to route the exhaust piping to the roof of the garage, so the fumes were not a problem,” he continues. “Smoke, heat, noise—no problem. Standing on the sidewalk in front of the generators, the passing buses are louder than the generators. It’s been a wonderful success.”

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Essentially, Ross says there were “no hitches; it was planned pretty well and fell into place.” There were a few tweaks along the way, however. The generators fit well in plain view, with a “nice maintenance area,” but, because height was an issue, they had to offset the silencers, tightly wrapping the piping. The parallel gear resides in a glass-walled room adjacent to the generators. They had to work with the city to address the fire ratings due to an aboveground fuel vault with three 10,000-gallon tanks in a containment basin.

More coordination was needed when they determined the best route for the distribution to the hospital was through a project that was joining two package decks. “We evaluated three routes,” recalls Ross. “There were all kinds of utilities running in the surrounding areas.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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jobigger

July 2nd, 2009 7:47 AM PT

I have been a reader/subscriber of Distributed Energy since Issue No. 1 and look forward to each issue. That said, I found the author's descriptions in "Medical Power Practices" of the equipment and systems for Vanderbilt University's Medical Center emergency power system to be very confusing. A large portion of the word descriptions in the article could have been replaced by simplified one-line diagrams of the hospital campus systems, for instance. And what cost and performance information that was provided was sprinkled throughout the article; a concise summary is much more valuable to the reader (see, for example, Table 1 on page 20 of this issue). The Caterpiller units are impressive but one or two of the photos could have been replaced with other graphics that would increase the reader's understanding of the overall system's operation and benefits. Connecting together various emergency and alternative electric generating systems to create high-efficiency, -reliability, or -security networks on a university campus, medical complex, or industry development is being recognized as an opportunity for significant savings of energy and funds. Clarity is critical to describing these projects. For a comparison, an article appeared in the April 2009, issue of POWER magazine (page 22) describing a similar project to increase reliability of the Illinois Institute of Technology campus in Chicago, Illinois.

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