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Energy COOL warming roads

March 8th, 2008 · 2 Comments

Solar is a highly efficient for heating water. Combining it with underground storage, and a year-round system can be created where the system can cover heating requirements in the winter and cooling in the summer.  The Dutch company Ooms Avenhorn Holding BV has taken this concept and moved it a step forward with the Road Energy System® (RES).  

Rather than putting tubes on a rooftop, RES lays the collection system within concrete, think the black asphalt of a road or runway.  The piping connects to undeground storage areas. Think walking on black asphalt on a sunny August day and you understand the heat being transfered into the water in the pipes. This water is then transfered into the storage area.  On demand, in cold weather, the hot water is draw on to heat buildings and to keep the road above freezing. After cooling, the water is moved into cold storage to provide air conditioning for summer months.  A year round solar/geothermal heating/cooling system for both the road and buildings.  The renewable combo greatly reduces electricity requirements (and thus pollution) and the cooling/heating of the road reduces maintenance requirements (and lowers/eliminates deicing and plowing requirements in winter).

And it is deployed.   “Solar Energy collected from a 200-yard stretch of road and a small parking lot helps heat a 70-unit four-story apartment building in the northern village of Avenhorn. An industrial park of some 160,000 square feet in the nearby city of Hoorn is kept warm in winter with the help of heat stored during the summer from 36,000 square feet of pavement. The runways of a Dutch air force base in the south supply heat for its hangar.”

For more information, see this brochure.

Hat tip to Scholars and Rogues.

Tags: solar

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 BruceMcF // Mar 8, 2008 at 5:12 pm

    Of course, there will be less asphalt when we are wasting less acreage on parking lots … 8-)# … but we still will have bikeways and light rail lines where we can apply the same principle.

  • 2 Simmons // Mar 8, 2008 at 10:56 pm

    Awesome site – I’ve added you to my (green) blogroll. I’d appreciate it if you linked back. Thanks!