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Senior Thesis Presentation: The Westlake Recreation Center

Senior Thesis Presentation: The Westlake Recreation Center. Summer Padgett Faculty Advisor: Dr. Mistrick Electrical / Lighting Option April 13th, 2004. Building Information. This facility serves as a park and recreation center for the citizens of Westlake Total Building Area: 82,710 ft 2

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Senior Thesis Presentation: The Westlake Recreation Center

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  1. Senior Thesis Presentation: The Westlake Recreation Center Summer Padgett Faculty Advisor: Dr. Mistrick Electrical / Lighting Option April 13th, 2004

  2. Building Information • This facility serves as a park and recreation center for the citizens of Westlake • Total Building Area: 82,710 ft2 • Total cost of the construction: $15.3 million dollars • Features four swimming pools, a gymnasium, locker rooms, a fitness room, a multi-purpose room, a babysitting room, a community room and recreation department offices

  3. Discussion Topics LIGHTING • Lighting redesign one indoor space and one outdoor space ELECTRICAL / CM • Cost analysis of a power factor correction

  4. LIGHTING – Exterior Photographs:Front Façade of Building and Drive-around Inside of Front Porch Front Porch Exterior Façade

  5. LIGHTING – Exterior Location of Lighting Redesign

  6. LIGHTING – Exterior • IES CRITERIA: • Facial Modeling, peripheral detection, and shadows are issues that must be addressed in this area. The building is open until 10:00 p.m. at night, so security is a concern. • A horizontal illuminance of 5 footcandles and a vertical illuminance of 3 footcandles is required near the entrance. • Since I am dealing with the exterior, light pollution is always an issue.

  7. LIGHTING – Exterior • DESIGN GOALS: • Metaphorically, I want the front porch to act as a beacon, or guiding light to the entrance of the Recreation Center • Distinct separation between the road and the sidewalk • Wanted to create a streetscape theme to define pathways and draw attention to the front façade to highlight the architecture

  8. LIGHTING – Exterior • EQUIPMENT USED: • Davit Mounted 16’ Pole Fixtures Lining the Drive-Around • Bollards Lining the walkways • Two metal halide pendant-mounted fixtures in the porch • Inground wallwashing fixtures to accent the façade

  9. LIGHTING – Exterior EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Davit Mounted Pole Fixture: • 1-175 W MH lamp • Mounted at 16’

  10. LIGHTING – Exterior EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Bollard: • 1-100W MH lamp

  11. LIGHTING – Exterior EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Inground Fixture: • 1-70W MH lamp

  12. LIGHTING – Exterior EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Pendant Fixture: • 1-100W MH lamp

  13. LIGHTING – Exterior ILLUMINANCE RESULTS: DRIVEWAY SIDEWALK PORCH

  14. LIGHTING – Exterior RENDERINGS:

  15. LIGHTING – Exterior CONCLUSIONS: • The power density for an entrance with a canopy is 3W/ ft2, so 0.4 W/ ft2 is significantly under this requirement. • The allowable power density for façade area is 0.25 W/ ft2 , so the power density for my façade just meets this. • The average porch illuminance is 8.83 fc, which is more than the required 5 footcandles. • Pole fixtures provide distinction between the road and the sidewalk. • Pendants in porch area give the area a glow without adding light pollution.

  16. LIGHTING – Community Room Photograph:Community Room Interior • Community Room Interior: • Ceiling Height = 13’3” • 4 large square coves Ceiling r=80% Wall r=50% Carpet r=30%

  17. LIGHTING – Community Room Room Layout

  18. LIGHTING – Community Room Location of Lighting Redesign

  19. LIGHTING – Community Room • IES CRITERIA: • Very Important: Appearance of the space and color appearance/contrast are issues here because this is an elegant area. Color correlated temperatures should be kept around 3000K. • Important: Modeling of faces is important in this area since people will most likely be dressed nicely and their facial modeling should reflect this. • Important: Light distribution on surfaces should be even, there should be no glare and there should be no distracting shadows.

  20. LIGHTING – Community Room DESIGN GOALS: • Metaphorically, the community room is like the gem of the recreation center. It is the most formal of all of the spaces and I wanted to reflect that in my design. • This area is used for banquets, luncheons and dinners most often, so I wanted to design it as a dining area with adequate light for note-taking, since there is a speaker every now and then. • I wanted the room to look like a theatre-type setting with a simple elegance to it for fine dining. I wanted to keep it as uncluttered as possible.

  21. LIGHTING – Community Room EQUIPMENT USED: • Pendant Mounted Semi-direct Fixtures • Decorative wall sconces on pillars around the room • Fluorescent strips in all four coves • Compact fluorescent downlights within and between the coves

  22. LIGHTING – Community Room EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Semi-direct Pendant: • 4-24W CFL lamps • Suspended 6’

  23. LIGHTING – Community Room EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Fluorescent Staggered Strips: • 1-32W T8 for 4’ Fixtures • 1-25W T8 for 3’ fixtures

  24. LIGHTING – Community Room EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • 6” Compact Fluorescent Downlight: • 2-26W CFL lamps

  25. LIGHTING – Community Room EQUIPMENT LOCATIONS: • Wall Sconce: • 1-26W CFL lamp

  26. LIGHTING – Community Room ILLUMINANCE RESULTS: TABLE FLOOR COVE

  27. LIGHTING – Community Room RENDERINGS:

  28. LIGHTING – Community Room CONCLUSIONS: • The power density for a cafeteria is 1.8 W/ ft2 and the power density for family dining is 1.9 W/ ft2 , so 1.4 W/ ft2 falls below both of these and is therefore okay. • Pendants and wall sconces add an air of elegance, while still maintaining a non-cluttered look • The cove is does not look ‘washed out’ since only one-lamp strip fixtures are used

  29. Power Factor Correction Analysis PROCESS: Many utilities charge a penalty for low power factors. The power factor is the ratio of working to total power – the reactive component performs no useful work. * Analyzed the financial impact of improving the power factor to 90% by adding capacitors * Based off of12 months worth of utility bills supplied by the city’s engineer

  30. Power Factor Correction Analysis PROCESS: Calculated the PF for all 12 months using the formula: PF = cos [tan-1(rKVA Demand/Measured KVA load)] Checked the reactive billing demand: Reactive billing demand = KW*(kVAR Hours/ kW Hours) – 30 3) Calculated the kVAR cost per month based on a Medium General Service Schedule: REACTIVE DEMAND CHARGE = $0.48 per rKVA Actual cost per month = Reactive billing demand*($0.48 / hour)

  31. Power Factor Correction Analysis PROCESS: 4) With the existing and desired power factors use the capacitor correction table to find a multiplier 5) Multiply the building’s electrical kW load by this number to get the KVAR of capacitors required RESULTS: Total KVAR cost for 2002: $1691.15 100 KVAR of capacitors needed to correct PF Cost of 100 KVAR capacitor = $828 (comSprague) Total savings for one year = $863.15 *Almost an immediate payback!!

  32. SPECIAL THANKS • Van Dijk, Westlake, Reed, Leskosky – Cleveland, OH • Dr. Mistrick and Dr. Moeck • Professor Ken Davidson – PSU Facilities Engineering • Michael Rump – Westlake Recreation Department • Bob Kelly – Engineer for the City of Westlake • John Durkee – Bacik, Karpinski, & Associates • Rajeev Chokshi – VWRL Architects and Engineers • Phil LiBassi, Principal – VWRL Architects and Engineers

  33. COMMENTS / QUESTIONS • Thank you for your attention!

  34. Exterior Controls I selected an outdoor controller to control the exterior lighting loads (Poles, Inground fixtures, bollards). The Outdoor Controller uses the exterior photocell sensor to read light levels and transmit the data to the controller module. The photocell will be mounted on the porch roof, which faces the northern sky.

  35. Comm. Room Controls

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