Record Heat and Power
From the San Francisco Chronicle - record temps require lots of grid juice for cooling.
With triple-digit
temperatures turning California into a kiln, the state could set a
record this week for the amount of electricity it uses. Managers of California's electrical grid on Tuesday warned that the
state could break the record set two years ago, when an intense heat
storm baked the West Coast for nearly two weeks.
Meanwhile, Allison Arieff talks air conditioning design in the New York Times and gets extra points for making the larger community design connection. At the end is the question that has been dogging me since the late 70s.
Acknowledging the challenge of cooling in hotter climates, Sun Frost proposes installing a very small air conditioner within a very small area, like the insulated space around one’s bed shown here.
Great. You may be cooler, but now you’re claustrophobic.
... its execution speaks to a larger issue: a general lack of innovation. Instead of re-imagining what an air conditioner could be (something portable, something that took a different form, something that ran on an alternative energy source), they simply took the existing form and shrank it.
This seems to me indicative of so much that’s happening right now with other big-ticket items like homes and cars. Lower gas prices, for example, do not solve the problem of decreasing supply and increased demand for oil. Home designs that neglect to address things like natural light and ventilation are not contributing to quality of life, let alone reducing heating and cooling costs.
The gas/driving issue requires a tremendous commitment to not only alternative fuels but alternative behaviors (i.e., walking, carpooling, mass transit); as for housing, the challenges are formidable, yet a quick look back to vernacular precedents like shotgun houses that encourage ventilation, and window orientation that encourages passive heating and cooling, would help point things in the right direction.
What is everyone waiting for?
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