Plumbing Africa September 2020 | Page 29

PROJECT 27 The EESCO design team consisted of Andrew Lowe, who is a qualified plumber, the owner Bruce Thomas who has a background in commercial refrigeration, and Shawn McRae who is the technical adviser. “Beacon Road, which is now called ‘Elevate’, is a project that was developed by Ithemba Property Development (alone) for Divercity Urban Property Fund. The link to Jewel City is that Divercity is also the landlord/owner of Jewel City, and we think of all of these developments as part of a combined investment in improving this part of the city,” says Carel Kleynhans, Director: Ithemba Property Development. Jewel City is a wider project which is changing the face of Johannesburg’s CBD and revitalising several city blocks that had been closed to the public for decades. This development is a mixed-use and amenity-rich affordable housing precinct. The Jewel City redevelopment initiative is a substantial investment in Joburg by Divercity, a new investment fund that is renewing and re-energising South Africa’s urban centres with unique inner-city precinct development. The system The brief EESCO tendered on was to ‘heat 30 000l from 15°C to 55°C in six hours in winter conditions of 0°C ambient temperature’, winter being the worst-case scenario, according to Trinesh Chanka, a director at Izazi Consulting Engineers. “The original tender was for an imported ‘all-in-one’ type heat pump that would have needed the evaporator cold air to be ducted out of the basement. We proposed our alternative locally manufactured hear pump. Our scope ended with the plant, and the plumbing company (Plumbcon) took over from there with the ring-main systems and sanitaryware,” says Thomas. The system was installed in November 2019 and the building has subsequently been populated floor by floor and wing by wing. “This is an indirect heating system, but our system is different. There are other systems in the market which use a stainless-steel coil dropped into the inside of a square tank to heat the water. In our experience, that is an inefficient means of heat transfer. With our more modern doublepass brazed plate-heat exchanger. The efficiency is up to about 98%, because of the greater amount of contact area between the two mediums,” says Thomas. The holding tank and pressure sets are designed to counter the risk of dips in municipal water pressure, he says. “In addition to the storage in the basement, there is storage up on the roof so the complex is not reliant on municipal water pressure but on its own system. The hot water system itself is low pressure and unaffected by water pressure, which is why we can have more economical fibreglass tanks rather than steel pressure tanks.” The three fibreglass tanks, 450kW heat pump and two 1 000kW heat exchangers are located in a plantroom in the basement, with a backup boiler (which has never yet been used). “The R134 A refrigerant used in our heat pumps enable us to heat water up to 80°C, which means you can use less storage (for instance, 20 000l as opposed to 30 000l at 60°C). “Another advantage of a plate heater exchange over a coil in a tank is that we can locate the plate closer to the delivery point, and with that higher temperature you can run smaller pipelines. Instead of a two-inch pipe running 60°C water, for example, you could have a 40mm pipe running 70°C water.” Fresh water is pumped into the plate exchanger and once it is heated is transferred up to the two separate ring main feeds. The fresh municipal water is instantaneously heated by the primary water stored in the thermal fibre-glass storage vessels. The consulting engineers – Izazi Consulting Engineers – made the choice to split it into two systems. As to the saving, Thomas points out that compared to the electric boiler back-up system it has, the savings are expected to be on average 65%. A minimum of 50% in winter and as much as 70% in summer. “The three fibreglass tanks, 450kW heat pump and two 1 000kW heat exchangers are located in a plantroom in the basement, with a backup boiler (which has never yet been used).” September 2020 Volume 26 I Number 07 www.plumbingafrica.co.za