Allgreatmen
Mechanical
- Apr 1, 2004
- 7
I'm looking at the possibility of using ground-coupled, vertical stack water source heat pumps to provide htg/clg for the guest rooms in a new 450 room hotel (12 floors) in the Pacific Northwest.
Based on the Geotech report and our analysis the economics look pretty good relative to the other option (straight 4-pipe fan coil) being considered. (That said, if anybody has solid cost data for what it takes to bore and install a vertical-type ground coupled piping system ($/foot perhaps?) on the scale being considered here, I'd appreciate that.)
My question, however, is regarding the acoustics of these heat pumps, since they'd be located within feet of sleeping hotel guests. Does anybody have any nightmare stories to share, and what to do to avoid them? This project is a 3- to 4-star hotel, so sound similar to what most hotel PTACs make as they cycle isn't good enough. Are there any design/install details I would need to pay particular attention to in order to avoid problems?
Based on the Geotech report and our analysis the economics look pretty good relative to the other option (straight 4-pipe fan coil) being considered. (That said, if anybody has solid cost data for what it takes to bore and install a vertical-type ground coupled piping system ($/foot perhaps?) on the scale being considered here, I'd appreciate that.)
My question, however, is regarding the acoustics of these heat pumps, since they'd be located within feet of sleeping hotel guests. Does anybody have any nightmare stories to share, and what to do to avoid them? This project is a 3- to 4-star hotel, so sound similar to what most hotel PTACs make as they cycle isn't good enough. Are there any design/install details I would need to pay particular attention to in order to avoid problems?