Industry News

 View Only

Iowa State MEs team up with Iowa Army National Guard to improve building resiliency

By District Energy posted 03-04-2021 09:12

  

Iowa State University - College of Engineering News

Summary

When the Iowa Army National Guard was looking for ways to improve the environmental sustainability of their facilities, they called upon the expertise of mechanical engineering researchers at Iowa State University.

Song-Charng Kong, mechanical engineering (ME) professor at Iowa State, led the effort. Former graduate student Benjamin Robertson, who completed his M.S. in ME in August 2020, assisted Kong. The project was the basis for Robertson’s thesis, Building energy efficiency retrofit prioritization: A case study of the Iowa Army National Guard.

The researchers analyzed the energy and water usage at Iowa Army National Guard (IAARNG) facilities to determine which buildings would be most suitable for energy retrofits in an effort to lessen energy and water usage rates. The IAARNG maintains more than 200 facilities across the state, ranging from classrooms and offices to repair shops and manufacturing facilities to warehouses and living quarters.

“We analyzed the data, ranked the buildings and facilities according to their energy and water consumptions, and identified strategies to increase the resilience of their facilities in case of disasters,” Kong said.

Kong connected with the IAARNG through Iowa State University’s Electric Power Research Center, where he is a research associate. Kong got involved with the project because of his expertise in building energy usage. Work on this project started in August 2018 and the researchers wrapped up their report in August 2020.

This project built upon past work on which Kong has collaborated with IAARNG examining combined heat and power generation for the Guard’s main facility in Fort Dodge.

Continue Reading


#MemberNewsIDEA
#News
#CHP

0 comments
1 view

Permalink