As HVAC professional, I appreciate that you took the time to understand the technology enough to communicate it. Typically these processes get dumbed down and communicated inaccurately. You did a great job simplifying and staying accurate.
That’s great. My daughter is in college. She’s quoted me twice in two different classes in essays or a project. I never even dreamed that would happen but it was amazing that she did that. Sounds like you have a cool dad too. Really cool 🎉
One of Chicago's greatest blessings is the big, blue natural air conditioner that exists all along the entire eastern edge of the city. Love that lake breeze! (Well, in the summer...)
Yes and one technical nitpick is the mention of “here a sea level” in the video. Lake Michigan and all the Great Lakes are hundreds of feet above sea level.
I was just a kid in 1995 but I still remember that summer. My grandparents came to visit us from Texas and they joked that had they known it was going to just as hot in Chicago they would’ve stayed home!
Unfortunately most of the stuff he says about the city is false. From not knowing where the term "gangway" came from and making up a story that it originated from Chicago, to not know what Chicago windows are or where they came from, to saying Millennium Park keeps the city cool, he's completely lost.
I didn't move to Chicago until 1997, but I know the 1995 heatwave left a deep mark on the city. It killed twice as many people as the Great Chicago Fire. I think only the Eastland disaster was deadlier. Not only did the city adapt infrastructure, they also set up more cooling centers and set up systems to check on the vulnerable and get them to safety, including subsidies to help pay for AC.
It's interesting to me how each city has adapted to over time in response to natural events it's had to overcome. In response to the ice storm of 1998 over here in Quebec our energy providers made significant changes to prevent such a disaster from happening again.
Great video! A note from a structural engineer: green roofs are beautiful, though can weigh more than 300 pounds per square foot depending on soil depth. Certainly not free, but worth it! The featured building looks much better with a green cap
And 2 other roof types to limit heat vs a standard black rubber roof: white which is just a color swap, and a PV Solar farm which turns that unwanted heat into a more useful form. Ultimately its up to the client/building owner, but you don't have to go all out on a green roof to have a more environmentally friendly roof. The sun delivers 1300W/m^2 to the top of the atmosphere, on a clear day that becomes about 1kW/m^2 which is a lot of energy to deal with. (Numbers memorized due to being an EE)
But does it offset the energy needs to produce and place and maintain 300lbs / sqft? I'd say no. They might look neat, but don't kid yourself. They're less green than literally doing nothing. It's like saying trash on the moon would be good for earth's environment, but getting it all to the moon would cause more pollution than the trash itself. And that in a nutshell, is a perfect analogy to all these green initiatives. Did you know wind farms use more fossil fuel energy than they will ever produce? Did you know that wind farms actively use diesel generators to keep the turbines spinning? Did you know large scale wind farms actively alter the local environment negatively? Did you know wind farms wreak destruction on local ecosystems? The amount of birds killed by them alone, results in a lot of branching side effects, right down to the level of pollinators. Green is not green. It's all a scam. Same with carbon capture. Not only is carbon thousands of times less of a greenhouse gas than all the climate predictions are based on (making it effectively not a greenhouse gas), carbon never actually gets removed, it's only shuffled around temporarily. When a plant that has captured carbon dies, it is released back into the environment. In fact, the largest contributor to carbon in the environment is decaying plant matter. So all those "green" crops of ethanol....they're not so green. When they decay after harvest, all that carbon gets released back into the environment. Even carbon capture facilities, and future ones, don't actually do anything but shuffle carbon around. That carbon gets reused in products. It's not like we bury it deep in the earth, which is in fact impossible, because it's not a solid, it's a gas. So even they aren't actually doing anything green. You can find issues like this at every stage of every "green" initiative. None of them are actually green. Not a single one. In comparison to them, nuclear energy and fossil fuels are actually better for the environment.
@@peoplez129 This is a weird comment. Just to respond to the first point, The cost to operate a building (especially the carbon cost) vastly outweighs the embodied carbon in the materials. I think you're parroting someone who isn't very knowledgeable about sustainability.
@@stewarthicksa suggestion, I feel the volume level from one scene to the next can be very different. Maybe consider normalizing them across the video?
I recently visited Chicago for the NeoCon design show and can say that it is the smartest, cleanest, most well designed place I've ever visited. I can't wait to go back.
It's a great city to live and work in. It really is so much cleaner then pretty much every large city. The building with NEOCON is a great example of re-fitting for efficiency. I worked there several times over the past few decades. The Merchandise Mart has a few good documentaries on it. It uses the system in this episode. It might still be the world's largest LEED Silver building. I'll completely disagree with the other reply. The population loss was a mistake, and corrected by a revision of the census. Taxes are high, but services are also much better than most other places. Hope your next trip is as fun, there are endless things to do here.
It’s also super green in the neighborhoods compared to other cities I’ve been too. Person above is right about the taxes though…they tax us for everything
@@Clementinee I was born in Jersey and most of my family is from there too 🫣 I remember going to school in Wisconsin and was shocked that a movie cost like $6 and there was no entertainment tax or none of that garbage lol Then I lived bordering NY/NJ and had a friend from Delaware who said they didn’t have taxes on clothes, so on and so forth. Taxes here are insane
I live in an old building like the manadnock building. brick, foot thick walls, it doesn't heat up until late after noon, and by morning it's cool again. pretty sweet.
I grew up in a 1979 split level house , all electric. Opening windows accomplished nothing cuz the house was designed to operate with AC . My mother refused to turn the AC on during the summer to save $$. I would walk a mile to the town old Carnegie library and stay there til dinner . My last house I purchased , was built in 1929 and even though it wasn’t anything fancy it received the most awesome ventilation when the windows were open . This bought me a couple “ free” months from my utility company every year and saved me $$. Our ancestors built to be comfortable and safe . They were not stupid , so it’s great that we are rediscovering all the terrific and fairly easy ideas that they utilized . Love these videos ! I learn a lot and they give me hope for the future .
BUT, please stop using the now ubiquitous grasshopper on crack background "music." That nasty sound, in nearly every new hip-hop song, cuts right through the air like nails on a chalkboard.
1:03 yo, heat transported outside buildings (where it affects others) isn't "why" AC is such a factor for global warming. The *local* feedback loop of heat transport in cities isn't the same thing as the larger feedback loop of AC power consumption (and refrigerant usage) advancing global warming. They're both key reasons why local AC should not be relied on so heavily, especially in cities with all their infrastructure. But they aren't the same thing at all. I realize the statement probably ended up that way through script iteration/editing, but it's important to draw the distinction as the implications and solutions for both are vastly different. anyway, nice video. MOTION GRAPHICS
In Saudi Arabia, specifically the holy mosques in Medina and Mecca are using the same type of cooling systems like this 5:44. It's not just cooling for the mosques, but because they're in the middle, we're getting massive anti-heat island results, Because the two mosques have multiple exits, the excess cold air flows from every direction.
Chicago has always engaged in extremely ambitious engineering projects: reversing the course of a river, giant underground tunnels, giant wastewater treatment plants, raising up the entire downtown of the city, and miles of skyscrapers. The greatest challenges are yet to come, with floods and droughts due to climate change, and underinvestment in public transportation. On the whole, however, Chicago is in a pretty good shape to thrive in the 21st century.
There are lots of smaller projects to keep the city going too. I agree, we have lots of these projects. People complain about taxes, but this is what we do with the money. Up by me, they built a diversion for the river during the increasing frequent floods(www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/cdot/supp_info/albany-park-stormwater-diverson-tunnel.html). Since they built it, it has done it's job nicely.
I'm going on a trip to chicago soon and I feel like the city is already so familiar. I know so much about so many random buildings! More than my own city that I've lived in over the past 10 years!
I highly recommend the Architecture tour on the river. You will see many of the buildings covered on this channel, and others like it. I'm a local, and have taken it a few times. This is a great city, hope you have a great trip.
Infrastructure in American cities is generally so neglected, I am always amazed and gratified to hear about initiatives like the cooling centers and mandatory green spaces described in this video. These make a big difference to those who live in cities, thanks Stewart for making them so beautifully visible to us!
These were great examples of different ways to keep cities cool in ways that don't generate more heat. The multi-building chiller unit seemed to be acting like a giant heat pump. Green roofs are great in that they reduce the heat on roofs and also can act as a green corridor for migratory birds and insects. It interesting to see ways tropical and semi-tropical communities have found to stay cool. Ancient Rome often built homes around central courtyards with a pool. Medieval homes from North Africa to Iran featured wind tunnels. The Palace at Versailles had vaulted ceilings. In modern Malasia, many homes are tri-level with central stairways. All of these used the stack effect to pull hot air up and out of buildings while bringing cool air in. One of the best uses of the stack effect is a large mall in urban Harai. It was built to mimic the way termite mounds maintain cool temperatures in extreme outdoor heat.
Stewart is getting real fancy with the videos. It's nice, but what has always drawn me to you stuff is you clear writing, calm articulation, and, of course, visuals (which were usually still in the past). I'm okay with the ziparounds and all, but don't forget to stay focused on the writing, which I think is your greatest talent.
Thank you. It's summer, so I'm not teaching and can dedicate more time to videos. I'm definitely working on writing and visuals together. Actually, feeling more confident about the writing let's me coordinate it with the visuals more fully. It's a win win. Thanks for the feedback!
Thoughtful design can solve a lot of issues. Ideally we have codes that keep our projects in line with creating beautiful, efficient, healthy, etc spaces… but it seems like we wait for tragedies before implementing these principles. I think that’s why it’s important to fill out city surveys, show up to council meetings, contact your representatives, etc. We can make our voices heard, and hopefully make a difference without waiting for tragedies.
As a non-architect, I am always amazed by the juxtaposition of art aesthetics and scientific engineering that are melded together in buildings. Thanks for the educational content.
I always loved the city Design in the game Mirror's Edge because i could tell they white clean look of the architecture was also designed to limit Heat Island effects
Chicago should do as Toronto and use the lake as a huge heat sink. Lay pipe out about 100 km to the bottom where the temperature is about 5°C and pump the water to the city district cooling plants as the "pre-cooler", then far less energy would be required for the final "push". Pipes leaving the city could go to fountains that shoot the warmed water in a huge "spray column" to cool the water back down (or return pipe spreaders near the surface).
it’s important to note that while these green infrastructure interventions are concentrated in Chicago’s downtown, the vast majority of those that died from the 95 heat wave were elderly in disinvested neighborhoods. Social isolation from streets with high vacancy and foreclosures, lack of close accessible services and businesses within walking distance, lack of outreach and poor ems response times, and high crime that kept people inside through fear among other factors contributed to the high death rate in certain neighborhoods. As harsh climate events continue, resiliency needs to be built into the human and social infrastructure of our cities, not just the physical infrastructure in high economically performing central business districts.
No AC at 90 degrees and it is cool in Paris. We are on the 5th (6th floor in US) floor, 1880 building - the front of our apartment faces northwest. Up high we always have lots of light all day. The back of our apartment faces southeast. We get sun in the morning in back and direct sunlight in the late afternoon in front. We use sun shades in the morning on the windows on the courtyard side and close our shutters on the windows on our balcony at about 5:30 PM in front and open them back up at 10 PM when the sun starts to set. We can open the windows at night and in the morning and get great airflow through the apartment. There is a cool breeze flowing through right now. We also open the guest room window on our apartment's second floor (attached chambre de bonne) and get great airflow up the stairs and out that window. Our building has the stairs at the back of the building (courtyard side) and that doesn't get much direct sun on the lower floors so there is not much thermal load retained in the stone. We keep windows open in the building stairwell and that keeps the internal stairway cool on even hot days. So with a little active thermal management it stays very comfortable in the summer. The breeze through the apartment is very pleasant. I think the Hausmannian architects actually knew what they were doing.
Thanks for explaining how that cooling building near the Sears Tower works. When I was a tour guide I always had a hard time figuring out something to say besides "it cools buildings"
Great video Stewart. It might seem overwhelming but lots of little things add up. When I built on to my house, I followed building practices from when the original section of the house was built, windows that open, venitian blinds, thick stucco exterior, And I do live in a part of the world where it does get cool at night (I.E. it was 9 C here this morning) but I am able to keep my place comfortable cool.
And another important tactic, your home is a several kWh thermal battery. Open all the windows at night and let the hot air out and the cool air in, and then in the morning shut the windows and close the blinds, a well insulated house doing this may not even get uncomfortably warm before its cooled off again outside. Obviously this strategy has limits, like if it doesn't actually cool down at night or you are in a perpetually humid environment. Even if you aren't striving for a perfect "passive house" that doesn't need AC or heat, just implementing such techniques can dramatically lower your energy usage, and therefore energy bills. Personally the lowest hanging fruit is the white roof, it rejects sunlight before it can become heat, and in the winter when you want that heat your roof is covered in snow anyway so you weren't getting any heat from it.
I live in South Carolina, but am heading to Chicago in a few weeks for a vacation. Thanks to you, I now have even more useless knowledge about the city that my wife and kids will absolutely not care about when I mention it, re-mention it, and trice mention it.
All my apartment windows face the east. As long as I keep the blinds closed in the morning during the summer, it stays rather cool throughout the day. I never need my ac unit, which saves a ton of money. It would have to be well into the 90's before I need to turn on the ceiling fan and the only time I open the windows is just to provide ventilation to remove stagnant air.
Great video Stewart, a little thermo before breakfast. A lot of the temperature control methods you outlined are part and parcel to how you control temperature in a spacecraft. There is no atmosphere outside the spacecraft that heat can be transferred to convectively, it all has to be done radiatively. The shiny blankets you see over the spacecraft in the old Apollo photographs are thermal control blankets. They are Teflon with film of aluminum coated on the back with black paint.
Just wish it’s ever-increasing taxes went away and stopped being the reason people are moving out of Illinois in huge masses. It’s about to be a beautiful city with potential, gone to waste.
@@faheemabbas3965- the population thing was an error that was corrected. We gained population. Taxes here are high, but when you look at the whole picture, lower insurance rates, availability of services by the state, county, city. Quality of services, social services, utility costs, it's a wash. Everyone I know that fled have been complaining about everything like how much water is, having to pay for more-expensive garbage services, other taxes, it's not as straightforward. Several are moving back because of this last round of power outages in TX, third big one in three years.
great vid. I pass these buildings all the time and work at the Old Post Office on Van Buren. So cool to learn about them. thanks for the effort you put into this
I struggle with the noise that comes from air conditioners, so I'm a huge fan of any kind of passive cooling technology, even if it's over a hundred years old!
There are completely silent AC’s though but i really like the thick façade technique and the passive cooling technique between the façade and the classrooms. Real cool
@@telly_0 daikin had some silent ductless AC’s but they’ve also got ducted AC installs that’re noice less and pushing around a lot of air. Ductless AC’s are thise wall hung units and ducted installs are the ones that heat and cool complete homes also known as central AC
@@telly_0 i’m not sure if you can hear those quiet compressors from daikin with a room next to it, my house is made from brick and concrete so that might make a difference.
The Monadnock building is a great example of how we should look to the past if we truly want to be sustainable. People found ways to stay cool long before A/C was a thing. Bricks and earthen building materials are natural, durable and ecofriendly, and really effective at regulating humidity and temperature. Rammed earth buildings that were built hundreds of years ago are not only still standing but are still occupied in China, Iran, Morocco, Italy, Africa, and across the mediterranean. Many of these places dont use a/c because the building’s structural elements are often sufficient. Traditional building practices are time tested and should be embraced if we wish to be carbon neutral and sustainable.
so cool to see Loyola Chicago buildings on your videos once i moved to Chicago for Loyola i watched all your chicago planning and city videos, its coming full circle
Indianapolis has district cooling as well. I read somewhere that Indianapolis' district cooling & steam heating utilities are the second biggest in the country, behind only NYC. Interestingly, the OneAmerica tower in Indianapolis is cooled by an aquifer. The water is then sent to the Downtown Canal, which is what is left of a failed 1800s project to build a canal from Lake Michigan to the Ohio River.
Echoing an earlier comment that your videos just get better and better. It's fascinating to me how we're having to relearn passive cooling from buildings like the Monadnock.
I live by the lake to the east of the Loop (east end of Randolph) and walk about a mile to work in the Loop. In bad weather - hot, cold, or raining - I can do half my "commute" by walking through the garages underneath Maggie Daley and Millennium Park. It's always a far more comfortable temperature underground, although the scenery leaves a lot to be desired.
Thanks for this video! Im finishing a masters in sustainable architecture and energy efficiency, lots of the concepts im familiar by now but the visual representation and the simple explanations are on point!
The death of mature elm trees across the U.S. by disease, was a stunning blow to cities. After watching a lot of videos, I had a whole house ceiling fan installed. Turn it on when its dark, usually turn it off before I go to bed. Sometimes run it again briefly when I get up. On VERY hot days I leave it on all night. I've messed around with lots of fans, AC, and this is by the far the best for cooling. And a LOT cheaper. Highly recommend.
Yeah, True tho... I just Love People who Move in Solutions and Problem Solvers if Possible to do so.. We get, understand & see the "Problems"... But No One Dives into "Solutions".. And There ARE Solutions... But since it's Not where the $$$ lies,. And Happiness,. We are only Stuck with The Problems.
I''ve always thought that the electric grid, being mainly made up of metallic parts, would produce a lot of heat and store it. However, it is more likely that automobiles, which are also made of metal, are among the largest heat producers in a city. The farther they drive, the more heat they collect. Once parked, they become constant radiators of heat.
A parked car is not really a issue. the most heat created is from the friction between the wheels and the road. the more friction the more heat. the biggest creator of heat in a city is our own sewage. you can notice it when it is snowing the first part that is snow/ice free will be a manhole connected to the sewer.
This was a fun watch! District cooling actually makes a lot of sense, I'm surprised we don't see more use of district heating and cooling in cities since it's so efficient and removes the need for each building to maintain their own system.
A few years ago I got interested in a design element but couldn't find a word for it . Turns out there isn't an english word but there is one in spanish, ventana abocinada. It means flared windows or openings. Essentially you've seen it a dozen times where a building will have windows with bevels around it and its inset. This allows for a wider field of views and daylight but the bevel creates a deep overhang. Designers will also angle each bevel per window to block out sunlight for that specific window. I'd urge you to look into the word. It's a common practice but sometimes we need a tangible word before something becomes concrete in our design thinking.
1) I had no idea that Chicago utilizes district cooling - very… cool! 2) the juxtaposition between those two buildings done by legendary architects Burnham and Van Der Rohe is just… awesomely Chicago.
Really cool video! (Pun not intended, but also not regretted!) I’ve heard of several of these techniques, but seeing them all being used together is really interesting! Keep up the awesome!
If we ever build a house it will have a wrap-around _covered_ porch, large exterior windows (shaded by roof over porch), interior transom windows, and a cupola up top to vent out hot air (with solar-powered fan to draw in air from the exterior windows, through the rooms, then hallway, into the center and then up the cupola.
Love the production quality, easily one of the best educational channels here! Would love to offer some pro-bono drone content for you- I'm based out the Milwaukee area. Cheers!
Well done! It was great that you were able to cover these subjects within one city. It was also insightful to understand the change of demand cities and buildings have over time.
In 2019 as apart of the Old Post Office project a pipeline from production plant 2 was dug under the river to service new building like the BMO Harris tower on canal
We have several smart structures here in MN that most people don’t realize…. Mall of America doesn’t use any central heating. It maintains 70 degrees in January with the use of solar skylights, ambient heat from mechanical systems and lighting and the body heat of shoppers. And many other malls use heat pumps. In fact, up until 10 years ago one of the corporate HQ’s was getting all its heating and AC from groundwater using just a 50hp electric pump.
What is the difference in efficiency between jambo glycol cooling system and compressor a c units? Can we use it to flatten solar p v curve to store cool and use it when sun is set?
Oh yea first thing I think of when I think of Chicago is how crazy hot it is.. as I’m on break working outside in 118 degree weather for the past month in Yuma Arizona. Ridiculous
When I heard that Chicago has a district cooling system, I assumed it was going to be a deep-water air conditioning system, just like in Toronto. We have a deep-water cooling system for downtown, and it provides 207 MW of cooling by pulling water from the bottom of Lake Ontario.
Thank you for explaining the centralized system. It rather suggests what can be done on a small scale without too much disruption in older neighborhoods. Greenwalls are very economical thermal buffers.
HVAC engineer here. A lot of architects nowadays like to slap a big piece of glass on any facade. Calling it "open" and "modern". (Its just cheaper) I just see a huge cooling problem. There are also "renowned" architects that then disallow any outside sunscreens. Because they don't like it. The energy waste they design is enough to make my blood boil. Give me a brick facade with a nice bond (half bond or stacked bond are trash imo) And a few large windows with pretty awning blinds. And I'll love it.
District Cooling is a very interesting subject, and glad you covered it! In Toronto Canada, we have the largest system of its kind. Enwave’s Deep Lake Water Cooling system. It’s harnesses the cold water from Lake Ontario to cool large downtown properties. Very interesting system!
Toronto Canada has the Enwave service (look it up) which draws cold water from deep in lake Ontario (naturally near 4°C) and distributes it to downtown buildings for cooling. Not sure if buildings are allowed to draw from the warm water produyced by others to "heat pump" their hot water or even heating. (which would be most efficient). Also nitpick: air conditioning does not contribute to global warming (unless the electricity is produced by fossils). AC units don't introduce gases that retain heat on the planet, and are technically net 0 (except for heat generated by compressor) since they just transger energy from one side to another without adding to it. (either in cooling or heating modes). They had impact on ozone layer does to CFCs which was somewhat mitigated with newer refrigirnt gases.
I think Stewart's point about A/C is that it uses large amounts of energy to produce the cold air while at the same time being offset with the by-product of hot air, especially if that energy is produced by non-renewable means such as a coal-powered plant then it's contributing to warming. It isn't neutral. While the Enwave system would seem to have some similarities to Chicago's district cooling system, they are actually different, but possibly complementary strategies. It could be worth both Chicago and Toronto looking at the other's large scale cooling strategies.
@@pauly5418 Enwave gets free colling as the water it drawn from deep Lake Ontario is always cold and does not need to be chilled, so far more energy efficient than certral cooling plants.
@@jfmezei I read a little more into this. The capital costs of building the intake pipes miles out and deep into Lake Ontario make it expensive upfront. So, it's not free in that sense. In the Canadian context, there are a number of government incentives, whereas in the Chicago context may be different. Also, there are a few private electricity utilities in Chicago. In Toronto, electricity is a public utility and there isn't really a choice of provider. Up until 2021, Chicago's district cooling system and Toronto's deep lake water cooling system were actually owned and run by the same company. Both are actually district cooling systems. There are many lower carbon solutions and the reasons one may be used over another could be many, including geography and financing options. While the deep lake water cooling system yields substantial energy savings, it's not 100% or as much as you think. The important part of Chicago's system is that it essentially shifts energy consumption to off peak hours where there is excess capacity. That's not a bad thing.
I’ve been to many places and was lucky enough to spend a month in Chicago. By far one of my favorite cities it’s often overlooked because of the crime but it’s a real gem! Also checkout brown bag near the cloud for food.
Planting the Miyawaki forests in the empty plots in the interchange roads can be very beneficial in cooling the surrounding environment. Good job Chicago keep moving❤❤❤
He says at 7:15, "The U.S. Energy Department's data shows that pre-1920 commercial buildings use less energy per square foot than those built at any other time during the 20th century," except the graph clearly displays that buildings built in the 1930s and 1940s use less energy per square foot than those built in the 1900s, 1910s, and 1920's. Is this a joke, like is he trying to prove to us that he is a liar or confused about the data or something? Also, he said lighter surfaces reflect more light, but technically the word should be refracting. They refract, while a mirror reflects. You can't see your reflection in a white sidewalk.
As HVAC professional, I appreciate that you took the time to understand the technology enough to communicate it. Typically these processes get dumbed down and communicated inaccurately. You did a great job simplifying and staying accurate.
Hey that’s my dad! Really cool to see his work featured here, the Loyola campus is awesome, some of his proudest work!
Hey, I saw your dad on youtube.
Hey may be your dad but he ain't your Daddy
That’s great. My daughter is in college. She’s quoted me twice in two different classes in essays or a project. I never even dreamed that would happen but it was amazing that she did that. Sounds like you have a cool dad too. Really cool 🎉
@@hahahajackmyswag👈🏾weirdo
I’d be embarrassed if my father was a climate change activist 🤣 lefties should just go live in the woods w their little cult
One of Chicago's greatest blessings is the big, blue natural air conditioner that exists all along the entire eastern edge of the city. Love that lake breeze! (Well, in the summer...)
Atleast in the winter the prevailing wind blows out to the lake.
-Love from Upstate NY and our 2 snow belts.
And in the winter, that lakefront breeze bites back, and cuts your skin. 😂😂
Yes and one technical nitpick is the mention of “here a sea level” in the video. Lake Michigan and all the Great Lakes are hundreds of feet above sea level.
Lived in Chicago for 22 years and thanks to this channel I'm learning a heap of new things about it. Thanks a million! Keep up the great work!
I was just a kid in 1995 but I still remember that summer. My grandparents came to visit us from Texas and they joked that had they known it was going to just as hot in Chicago they would’ve stayed home!
Unfortunately most of the stuff he says about the city is false. From not knowing where the term "gangway" came from and making up a story that it originated from Chicago, to not know what Chicago windows are or where they came from, to saying Millennium Park keeps the city cool, he's completely lost.
I didn't move to Chicago until 1997, but I know the 1995 heatwave left a deep mark on the city. It killed twice as many people as the Great Chicago Fire. I think only the Eastland disaster was deadlier. Not only did the city adapt infrastructure, they also set up more cooling centers and set up systems to check on the vulnerable and get them to safety, including subsidies to help pay for AC.
Cold kills way more than heat.
Chicagoans kill way more than heat and cold combined
Great Chicago Fire? Was that a mostly peaceful protest or something?
It's interesting to me how each city has adapted to over time in response to natural events it's had to overcome. In response to the ice storm of 1998 over here in Quebec our energy providers made significant changes to prevent such a disaster from happening again.
@birdfig I know shotguns kill alot of people, but assault rifles kill more though
Great video! A note from a structural engineer: green roofs are beautiful, though can weigh more than 300 pounds per square foot depending on soil depth. Certainly not free, but worth it! The featured building looks much better with a green cap
And 2 other roof types to limit heat vs a standard black rubber roof: white which is just a color swap, and a PV Solar farm which turns that unwanted heat into a more useful form.
Ultimately its up to the client/building owner, but you don't have to go all out on a green roof to have a more environmentally friendly roof. The sun delivers 1300W/m^2 to the top of the atmosphere, on a clear day that becomes about 1kW/m^2 which is a lot of energy to deal with. (Numbers memorized due to being an EE)
But does it offset the energy needs to produce and place and maintain 300lbs / sqft? I'd say no. They might look neat, but don't kid yourself. They're less green than literally doing nothing. It's like saying trash on the moon would be good for earth's environment, but getting it all to the moon would cause more pollution than the trash itself. And that in a nutshell, is a perfect analogy to all these green initiatives.
Did you know wind farms use more fossil fuel energy than they will ever produce? Did you know that wind farms actively use diesel generators to keep the turbines spinning? Did you know large scale wind farms actively alter the local environment negatively? Did you know wind farms wreak destruction on local ecosystems? The amount of birds killed by them alone, results in a lot of branching side effects, right down to the level of pollinators. Green is not green. It's all a scam.
Same with carbon capture. Not only is carbon thousands of times less of a greenhouse gas than all the climate predictions are based on (making it effectively not a greenhouse gas), carbon never actually gets removed, it's only shuffled around temporarily. When a plant that has captured carbon dies, it is released back into the environment. In fact, the largest contributor to carbon in the environment is decaying plant matter. So all those "green" crops of ethanol....they're not so green. When they decay after harvest, all that carbon gets released back into the environment.
Even carbon capture facilities, and future ones, don't actually do anything but shuffle carbon around. That carbon gets reused in products. It's not like we bury it deep in the earth, which is in fact impossible, because it's not a solid, it's a gas. So even they aren't actually doing anything green.
You can find issues like this at every stage of every "green" initiative. None of them are actually green. Not a single one. In comparison to them, nuclear energy and fossil fuels are actually better for the environment.
@@peoplez129 You should really take what politicians and lobby-funded groups tell you with a few more grains of salt.
@@peoplez129 This is a weird comment. Just to respond to the first point, The cost to operate a building (especially the carbon cost) vastly outweighs the embodied carbon in the materials. I think you're parroting someone who isn't very knowledgeable about sustainability.
@@linkly9272 I wish they still paid people for telling the truth. I'd be making millions.
The quality of these videos just keeps getting better, Stewart!
Thank you!!
@@stewarthicksa suggestion, I feel the volume level from one scene to the next can be very different. Maybe consider normalizing them across the video?
I recently visited Chicago for the NeoCon design show and can say that it is the smartest, cleanest, most well designed place I've ever visited. I can't wait to go back.
I just wish it wasn’t so terrible to live in otherwise. Illinois’ taxes are why it’s losing so many people.
It's a great city to live and work in. It really is so much cleaner then pretty much every large city.
The building with NEOCON is a great example of re-fitting for efficiency. I worked there several times over the past few decades. The Merchandise Mart has a few good documentaries on it. It uses the system in this episode. It might still be the world's largest LEED Silver building.
I'll completely disagree with the other reply. The population loss was a mistake, and corrected by a revision of the census. Taxes are high, but services are also much better than most other places.
Hope your next trip is as fun, there are endless things to do here.
It’s also super green in the neighborhoods compared to other cities I’ve been too.
Person above is right about the taxes though…they tax us for everything
@@earthandwind820 2nd highest property taxes behind only New Jersey, 10% sales tax, and a flat income tax. It's hard to not stay poor living here lol
@@Clementinee I was born in Jersey and most of my family is from there too 🫣 I remember going to school in Wisconsin and was shocked that a movie cost like $6 and there was no entertainment tax or none of that garbage lol Then I lived bordering NY/NJ and had a friend from Delaware who said they didn’t have taxes on clothes, so on and so forth.
Taxes here are insane
I live in an old building like the manadnock building. brick, foot thick walls, it doesn't heat up until late after noon, and by morning it's cool again. pretty sweet.
I grew up in a 1979 split level house , all electric. Opening windows accomplished nothing cuz the house was designed to operate with AC . My mother refused to turn the AC on during the summer to save $$. I would walk a mile to the town old Carnegie library and stay there til dinner . My last house I purchased , was built in 1929 and even though it wasn’t anything fancy it received the most awesome ventilation when the windows were open . This bought me a couple “ free” months from my utility company every year and saved me $$. Our ancestors built to be comfortable and safe . They were not stupid , so it’s great that we are rediscovering all the terrific and fairly easy ideas that they utilized . Love these videos ! I learn a lot and they give me hope for the future .
Your transitions flying from one part of the city to another are looking nice 👌
BUT, please stop using the now ubiquitous grasshopper on crack background "music." That nasty sound, in nearly every new hip-hop song, cuts right through the air like nails on a chalkboard.
MOTION GRAPHICS tho
Definitely my favorite part of the video. Really helps keep track of where things are at.
@@bluebox2000what
They're simple, but very useful.
1:03 yo, heat transported outside buildings (where it affects others) isn't "why" AC is such a factor for global warming. The *local* feedback loop of heat transport in cities isn't the same thing as the larger feedback loop of AC power consumption (and refrigerant usage) advancing global warming. They're both key reasons why local AC should not be relied on so heavily, especially in cities with all their infrastructure. But they aren't the same thing at all.
I realize the statement probably ended up that way through script iteration/editing, but it's important to draw the distinction as the implications and solutions for both are vastly different.
anyway, nice video. MOTION GRAPHICS
"Air conditioners push the heat outside"
_Technology Connections flashbacks_
In Saudi Arabia, specifically the holy mosques in Medina and Mecca are using the same type of cooling systems like this 5:44. It's not just cooling for the mosques, but because they're in the middle, we're getting massive anti-heat island results, Because the two mosques have multiple exits, the excess cold air flows from every direction.
Chicago has always engaged in extremely ambitious engineering projects: reversing the course of a river, giant underground tunnels, giant wastewater treatment plants, raising up the entire downtown of the city, and miles of skyscrapers. The greatest challenges are yet to come, with floods and droughts due to climate change, and underinvestment in public transportation. On the whole, however, Chicago is in a pretty good shape to thrive in the 21st century.
There are lots of smaller projects to keep the city going too. I agree, we have lots of these projects. People complain about taxes, but this is what we do with the money.
Up by me, they built a diversion for the river during the increasing frequent floods(www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/cdot/supp_info/albany-park-stormwater-diverson-tunnel.html). Since they built it, it has done it's job nicely.
It can have a great future if its residents don't burn it down.
Chicago will be the last American city just because of geographical location.
I'm going on a trip to chicago soon and I feel like the city is already so familiar. I know so much about so many random buildings! More than my own city that I've lived in over the past 10 years!
I highly recommend the Architecture tour on the river.
You will see many of the buildings covered on this channel, and others like it.
I'm a local, and have taken it a few times. This is a great city, hope you have a great trip.
Two things NOT to miss: 1. The Field Museum. Built back when our ruling class cared about beauty. 2. Chicago Hot Dog. A glorious mess.
Like honestly Chicago is so underrated and yet it’s always a step ahead of everyone! Best city in the USA for sure
Infrastructure in American cities is generally so neglected, I am always amazed and gratified to hear about initiatives like the cooling centers and mandatory green spaces described in this video. These make a big difference to those who live in cities, thanks Stewart for making them so beautifully visible to us!
One of the best educators out there. Tremendous work.
These were great examples of different ways to keep cities cool in ways that don't generate more heat. The multi-building chiller unit seemed to be acting like a giant heat pump. Green roofs are great in that they reduce the heat on roofs and also can act as a green corridor for migratory birds and insects.
It interesting to see ways tropical and semi-tropical communities have found to stay cool. Ancient Rome often built homes around central courtyards with a pool. Medieval homes from North Africa to Iran featured wind tunnels. The Palace at Versailles had vaulted ceilings. In modern Malasia, many homes are tri-level with central stairways. All of these used the stack effect to pull hot air up and out of buildings while bringing cool air in. One of the best uses of the stack effect is a large mall in urban Harai. It was built to mimic the way termite mounds maintain cool temperatures in extreme outdoor heat.
Stewart is getting real fancy with the videos. It's nice, but what has always drawn me to you stuff is you clear writing, calm articulation, and, of course, visuals (which were usually still in the past). I'm okay with the ziparounds and all, but don't forget to stay focused on the writing, which I think is your greatest talent.
Thank you. It's summer, so I'm not teaching and can dedicate more time to videos. I'm definitely working on writing and visuals together. Actually, feeling more confident about the writing let's me coordinate it with the visuals more fully. It's a win win. Thanks for the feedback!
9:56 motion graphics 🙂
Oh no!
😂😂😂
I love the engaging way you introduce concepts of architecture that better harmonize with our planet
This video gives me a lot of hope for the incredibly warm future we're looking towards
Thoughtful design can solve a lot of issues. Ideally we have codes that keep our projects in line with creating beautiful, efficient, healthy, etc spaces… but it seems like we wait for tragedies before implementing these principles.
I think that’s why it’s important to fill out city surveys, show up to council meetings, contact your representatives, etc. We can make our voices heard, and hopefully make a difference without waiting for tragedies.
As a non-architect, I am always amazed by the juxtaposition of art aesthetics and scientific engineering that are melded together in buildings. Thanks for the educational content.
I love how the video length is Chicago’s area code.
😂
One of the major defects in many apartments is the lack of cross ventilation, often having windows on only one side.
I always loved the city Design in the game Mirror's Edge because i could tell they white clean look of the architecture was also designed to limit Heat Island effects
I'm a building engineer at NU. Love your videos. But video is what I deal with every day.
Sko ‘Cats!
Motion Graphics indeed! 😁 Stewart I have no idea how you do it. Fabulous video! Makes me think of Toronto's DWLC system.
Stewart, I love you videos. I'm a mechanical contractor in Vancouver, Canada. Please do more of these videos. Building systems are where its at.
Chicago should do as Toronto and use the lake as a huge heat sink. Lay pipe out about 100 km to the bottom where the temperature is about 5°C and pump the water to the city district cooling plants as the "pre-cooler", then far less energy would be required for the final "push". Pipes leaving the city could go to fountains that shoot the warmed water in a huge "spray column" to cool the water back down (or return pipe spreaders near the surface).
it’s important to note that while these green infrastructure interventions are concentrated in Chicago’s downtown, the vast majority of those that died from the 95 heat wave were elderly in disinvested neighborhoods. Social isolation from streets with high vacancy and foreclosures, lack of close accessible services and businesses within walking distance, lack of outreach and poor ems response times, and high crime that kept people inside through fear among other factors contributed to the high death rate in certain neighborhoods. As harsh climate events continue, resiliency needs to be built into the human and social infrastructure of our cities, not just the physical infrastructure in high economically performing central business districts.
The production quality of this video is top notch!
No AC at 90 degrees and it is cool in Paris. We are on the 5th (6th floor in US) floor, 1880 building - the front of our apartment faces northwest. Up high we always have lots of light all day. The back of our apartment faces southeast. We get sun in the morning in back and direct sunlight in the late afternoon in front. We use sun shades in the morning on the windows on the courtyard side and close our shutters on the windows on our balcony at about 5:30 PM in front and open them back up at 10 PM when the sun starts to set. We can open the windows at night and in the morning and get great airflow through the apartment. There is a cool breeze flowing through right now. We also open the guest room window on our apartment's second floor (attached chambre de bonne) and get great airflow up the stairs and out that window. Our building has the stairs at the back of the building (courtyard side) and that doesn't get much direct sun on the lower floors so there is not much thermal load retained in the stone. We keep windows open in the building stairwell and that keeps the internal stairway cool on even hot days. So with a little active thermal management it stays very comfortable in the summer. The breeze through the apartment is very pleasant. I think the Hausmannian architects actually knew what they were doing.
Thanks for explaining how that cooling building near the Sears Tower works. When I was a tour guide I always had a hard time figuring out something to say besides "it cools buildings"
Great video Stewart. It might seem overwhelming but lots of little things add up. When I built on to my house, I followed building practices from when the original section of the house was built, windows that open, venitian blinds, thick stucco exterior, And I do live in a part of the world where it does get cool at night (I.E. it was 9 C here this morning) but I am able to keep my place comfortable cool.
And another important tactic, your home is a several kWh thermal battery. Open all the windows at night and let the hot air out and the cool air in, and then in the morning shut the windows and close the blinds, a well insulated house doing this may not even get uncomfortably warm before its cooled off again outside.
Obviously this strategy has limits, like if it doesn't actually cool down at night or you are in a perpetually humid environment.
Even if you aren't striving for a perfect "passive house" that doesn't need AC or heat, just implementing such techniques can dramatically lower your energy usage, and therefore energy bills.
Personally the lowest hanging fruit is the white roof, it rejects sunlight before it can become heat, and in the winter when you want that heat your roof is covered in snow anyway so you weren't getting any heat from it.
A fascinating, instructive first look at an unseen but essential aspect of Chicago's built environment. Another nice job by Professor Hicks.
Thanks!
Thank you!!
I live in South Carolina, but am heading to Chicago in a few weeks for a vacation. Thanks to you, I now have even more useless knowledge about the city that my wife and kids will absolutely not care about when I mention it, re-mention it, and trice mention it.
Motion graphics! 10:00
This was great! Thank you for putting this together. I love my city and videos like this make me so proud.
All my apartment windows face the east. As long as I keep the blinds closed in the morning during the summer, it stays rather cool throughout the day. I never need my ac unit, which saves a ton of money. It would have to be well into the 90's before I need to turn on the ceiling fan and the only time I open the windows is just to provide ventilation to remove stagnant air.
Amazing video as always, but you missed a detail at 9:55 😂
“MOTION GRAPHICS” is the key to urban cooling
Ugh!
Great video Stewart, a little thermo before breakfast. A lot of the temperature control methods you outlined are part and parcel to how you control temperature in a spacecraft. There is no atmosphere outside the spacecraft that heat can be transferred to convectively, it all has to be done radiatively. The shiny blankets you see over the spacecraft in the old Apollo photographs are thermal control blankets. They are Teflon with film of aluminum coated on the back with black paint.
Very interesting!
Important topic, Great presentation. I work in a hot-humid climate zone with different conditions to deal with, but I found this presentation useful.
I love Chicago
Just wish it’s ever-increasing taxes went away and stopped being the reason people are moving out of Illinois in huge masses.
It’s about to be a beautiful city with potential, gone to waste.
@@faheemabbas3965- the population thing was an error that was corrected. We gained population.
Taxes here are high, but when you look at the whole picture, lower insurance rates, availability of services by the state, county, city. Quality of services, social services, utility costs, it's a wash.
Everyone I know that fled have been complaining about everything like how much water is, having to pay for more-expensive garbage services, other taxes, it's not as straightforward. Several are moving back because of this last round of power outages in TX, third big one in three years.
@4:28 wait? you have to collect the water, treat the water, pump the water, that is a very mechanical process..... all of that stuff costs energy too
that’s what i was thinking too
I went to Loyola, Schriber Center was easily my favorite building!
The quality of these videos just keeps getting better, Stewart!. One of the best educators out there. Tremendous work..
Chicago literally is built different 😅. Glad to call this place my home.
great vid. I pass these buildings all the time and work at the Old Post Office on Van Buren. So cool to learn about them. thanks for the effort you put into this
I struggle with the noise that comes from air conditioners, so I'm a huge fan of any kind of passive cooling technology, even if it's over a hundred years old!
There are completely silent AC’s though but i really like the thick façade technique and the passive cooling technique between the façade and the classrooms. Real cool
@@miles5600 Which AC's are completely silent? Are you talking about residential AC's, because those have always been very loud in my experience.
@@telly_0 daikin had some silent ductless AC’s but they’ve also got ducted AC installs that’re noice less and pushing around a lot of air. Ductless AC’s are thise wall hung units and ducted installs are the ones that heat and cool complete homes also known as central AC
@@miles5600 I see. Yeah, the compressor parts of all of those make noise unfortunately, which is unpleasant if your bedroom is right next to it.
@@telly_0 i’m not sure if you can hear those quiet compressors from daikin with a room next to it, my house is made from brick and concrete so that might make a difference.
The Monadnock building is a great example of how we should look to the past if we truly want to be sustainable. People found ways to stay cool long before A/C was a thing. Bricks and earthen building materials are natural, durable and ecofriendly, and really effective at regulating humidity and temperature. Rammed earth buildings that were built hundreds of years ago are not only still standing but are still occupied in China, Iran, Morocco, Italy, Africa, and across the mediterranean. Many of these places dont use a/c because the building’s structural elements are often sufficient. Traditional building practices are time tested and should be embraced if we wish to be carbon neutral and sustainable.
so cool to see Loyola Chicago buildings on your videos once i moved to Chicago for Loyola i watched all your chicago planning and city videos, its coming full circle
The library in Athens built the Niarchos family is covered by a wonderful vegetation covered hill
Indianapolis has district cooling as well. I read somewhere that Indianapolis' district cooling & steam heating utilities are the second biggest in the country, behind only NYC.
Interestingly, the OneAmerica tower in Indianapolis is cooled by an aquifer. The water is then sent to the Downtown Canal, which is what is left of a failed 1800s project to build a canal from Lake Michigan to the Ohio River.
did someone forget to replace the placeholder "motion graphics" text @9:56?
I have been to Millennium Park and if you told me I was on a roof I would not believe you. That's cool. Literally!
I wish I had this video when I was in my Environmental technology class. Seeing how these terms are used in a real life example is so helpful
Echoing an earlier comment that your videos just get better and better. It's fascinating to me how we're having to relearn passive cooling from buildings like the Monadnock.
I live by the lake to the east of the Loop (east end of Randolph) and walk about a mile to work in the Loop. In bad weather - hot, cold, or raining - I can do half my "commute" by walking through the garages underneath Maggie Daley and Millennium Park. It's always a far more comfortable temperature underground, although the scenery leaves a lot to be desired.
I thought you were standing in a park, I've never seen anything like that in the UK, that's really cool!
Thanks for this video! Im finishing a masters in sustainable architecture and energy efficiency, lots of the concepts im familiar by now but the visual representation and the simple explanations are on point!
I love seeing how our architectural tradition can teach important lessons so we can improve for the future.
One thing about my hometown, is that it's always inventing. Then a lot of cities follow. Chicago, is definitely a place that people need to know
The death of mature elm trees across the U.S. by disease, was a stunning blow to cities.
After watching a lot of videos, I had a whole house ceiling fan installed. Turn it on when its dark, usually turn it off before I go to bed. Sometimes run it again briefly when I get up. On VERY hot days I leave it on all night.
I've messed around with lots of fans, AC, and this is by the far the best for cooling. And a LOT cheaper.
Highly recommend.
Gotta love how most solutions to urban and ecological issues is literally just doing what we were doing 100+ years ago
Yeah, True tho... I just Love People who Move in Solutions and Problem Solvers if Possible to do so.. We get, understand & see the "Problems"... But No One Dives into "Solutions".. And There ARE Solutions... But since it's Not where the $$$ lies,. And Happiness,. We are only Stuck with The Problems.
I''ve always thought that the electric grid, being mainly made up of metallic parts, would produce a lot of heat and store it. However, it is more likely that automobiles, which are also made of metal, are among the largest heat producers in a city. The farther they drive, the more heat they collect. Once parked, they become constant radiators of heat.
Or millions of people in a small space living in metallic buildings on top of an asphalt parking lot…but your small brain thinks it’s cars 😂
A parked car is not really a issue. the most heat created is from the friction between the wheels and the road. the more friction the more heat.
the biggest creator of heat in a city is our own sewage. you can notice it when it is snowing the first part that is snow/ice free will be a manhole connected to the sewer.
This was a fun watch! District cooling actually makes a lot of sense, I'm surprised we don't see more use of district heating and cooling in cities since it's so efficient and removes the need for each building to maintain their own system.
I'm sure you've been called out on this already lol but I think you left in a template motion graphic at 9:56. Great video thought!
A few years ago I got interested in a design element but couldn't find a word for it . Turns out there isn't an english word but there is one in spanish, ventana abocinada. It means flared windows or openings. Essentially you've seen it a dozen times where a building will have windows with bevels around it and its inset. This allows for a wider field of views and daylight but the bevel creates a deep overhang. Designers will also angle each bevel per window to block out sunlight for that specific window. I'd urge you to look into the word. It's a common practice but sometimes we need a tangible word before something becomes concrete in our design thinking.
1) I had no idea that Chicago utilizes district cooling - very… cool!
2) the juxtaposition between those two buildings done by legendary architects Burnham and Van Der Rohe is just… awesomely Chicago.
Really cool video! (Pun not intended, but also not regretted!) I’ve heard of several of these techniques, but seeing them all being used together is really interesting! Keep up the awesome!
If we ever build a house it will have a wrap-around _covered_ porch, large exterior windows (shaded by roof over porch), interior transom windows, and a cupola up top to vent out hot air (with solar-powered fan to draw in air from the exterior windows, through the rooms, then hallway, into the center and then up the cupola.
Looking back at how buildings can be designed to be cooler is like looking back to trains, bicycling, and walking to get around our cities 😁
Love the production quality, easily one of the best educational channels here! Would love to offer some pro-bono drone content for you- I'm based out the Milwaukee area. Cheers!
Well done! It was great that you were able to cover these subjects within one city. It was also insightful to understand the change of demand cities and buildings have over time.
crazy to see how much growth this channel has gone through and every keeps getting better
2:27 45° cooler? Cmon man… so on a 100° day it’s 55° in the shade?
In 2019 as apart of the Old Post Office project a pipeline from production plant 2 was dug under the river to service new building like the BMO Harris tower on canal
We have several smart structures here in MN that most people don’t realize…. Mall of America doesn’t use any central heating. It maintains 70 degrees in January with the use of solar skylights, ambient heat from mechanical systems and lighting and the body heat of shoppers. And many other malls use heat pumps. In fact, up until 10 years ago one of the corporate HQ’s was getting all its heating and AC from groundwater using just a 50hp electric pump.
What is the difference in efficiency between jambo glycol cooling system and compressor a c units?
Can we use it to flatten solar p v curve to store cool and use it when sun is set?
This is the first Brilliant ad that made me think it's actually for me, not for high schoolers. Nice!
Excellent video on UHI effect mitigation measures... Hatts off for your all videos. Thank you 🙏🏻
Wow i pass by District Cooling #2 plant almost weekly and never knew this. Very impressive.
Oh yea first thing I think of when I think of Chicago is how crazy hot it is.. as I’m on break working outside in 118 degree weather for the past month in Yuma Arizona. Ridiculous
It was 102 at 11 pm last night
Great to see buildings at my alma mater, Loyola Chicago!
Quite interesting. Thank you for sharing. Great video 🎉
When I heard that Chicago has a district cooling system, I assumed it was going to be a deep-water air conditioning system, just like in Toronto. We have a deep-water cooling system for downtown, and it provides 207 MW of cooling by pulling water from the bottom of Lake Ontario.
Me too! (I'm from finland tho) It was cool to learn about a different way to do it
Thank you for explaining the centralized system. It rather suggests what can be done on a small scale without too much disruption in older neighborhoods. Greenwalls are very economical thermal buffers.
HVAC engineer here.
A lot of architects nowadays like to slap a big piece of glass on any facade. Calling it "open" and "modern". (Its just cheaper)
I just see a huge cooling problem.
There are also "renowned" architects that then disallow any outside sunscreens. Because they don't like it.
The energy waste they design is enough to make my blood boil.
Give me a brick facade with a nice bond (half bond or stacked bond are trash imo) And a few large windows with pretty awning blinds. And I'll love it.
District Cooling is a very interesting subject, and glad you covered it! In Toronto Canada, we have the largest system of its kind. Enwave’s Deep Lake Water Cooling system. It’s harnesses the cold water from Lake Ontario to cool large downtown properties. Very interesting system!
Great video, this is also the first ad I’ve been sold on.
Toronto Canada has the Enwave service (look it up) which draws cold water from deep in lake Ontario (naturally near 4°C) and distributes it to downtown buildings for cooling. Not sure if buildings are allowed to draw from the warm water produyced by others to "heat pump" their hot water or even heating. (which would be most efficient).
Also nitpick: air conditioning does not contribute to global warming (unless the electricity is produced by fossils). AC units don't introduce gases that retain heat on the planet, and are technically net 0 (except for heat generated by compressor) since they just transger energy from one side to another without adding to it. (either in cooling or heating modes). They had impact on ozone layer does to CFCs which was somewhat mitigated with newer refrigirnt gases.
I think Stewart's point about A/C is that it uses large amounts of energy to produce the cold air while at the same time being offset with the by-product of hot air, especially if that energy is produced by non-renewable means such as a coal-powered plant then it's contributing to warming. It isn't neutral.
While the Enwave system would seem to have some similarities to Chicago's district cooling system, they are actually different, but possibly complementary strategies. It could be worth both Chicago and Toronto looking at the other's large scale cooling strategies.
@@pauly5418 Enwave gets free colling as the water it drawn from deep Lake Ontario is always cold and does not need to be chilled, so far more energy efficient than certral cooling plants.
@@jfmezei I read a little more into this. The capital costs of building the intake pipes miles out and deep into Lake Ontario make it expensive upfront. So, it's not free in that sense. In the Canadian context, there are a number of government incentives, whereas in the Chicago context may be different. Also, there are a few private electricity utilities in Chicago. In Toronto, electricity is a public utility and there isn't really a choice of provider.
Up until 2021, Chicago's district cooling system and Toronto's deep lake water cooling system were actually owned and run by the same company. Both are actually district cooling systems. There are many lower carbon solutions and the reasons one may be used over another could be many, including geography and financing options.
While the deep lake water cooling system yields substantial energy savings, it's not 100% or as much as you think. The important part of Chicago's system is that it essentially shifts energy consumption to off peak hours where there is excess capacity. That's not a bad thing.
I’ve been to many places and was lucky enough to spend a month in Chicago. By far one of my favorite cities it’s often overlooked because of the crime but it’s a real gem! Also checkout brown bag near the cloud for food.
Planting the Miyawaki forests in the empty plots in the interchange roads can be very beneficial in cooling the surrounding environment. Good job Chicago keep moving❤❤❤
He says at 7:15, "The U.S. Energy Department's data shows that pre-1920 commercial buildings use less energy per square foot than those built at any other time during the 20th century," except the graph clearly displays that buildings built in the 1930s and 1940s use less energy per square foot than those built in the 1900s, 1910s, and 1920's. Is this a joke, like is he trying to prove to us that he is a liar or confused about the data or something? Also, he said lighter surfaces reflect more light, but technically the word should be refracting. They refract, while a mirror reflects. You can't see your reflection in a white sidewalk.
Motion Graphics!
I think the editor missed something at 9:55 😅
That was me.
@@stewarthicks Oh no!
It happens, and it made me laugh, so accidental success?