DuctHunter
Mechanical
- Aug 14, 2007
- 31
I think I posted this thread in the wrong place the first time.
I am designing a four story hotel with a commercial laundry room on the first floor.
We were given a prototype design to follow, but the problem is the prototype was designed for Atlanta and the hotel is located in Michigan. The gas dryers for the laundry room will require a maximum of 2400 cfm of make-up air (assuming all dryers are running at the same time..600 cfm per dryer). We can't make-up the air from the corridors or building interior because we are only using small fan coil units to ventilate the core office spaces with 80 cfm of outside air here and there. Plus the dryer manufacturer prefers the air make-up directly from the outdoors. In the Atlanta prototype they are making up the dryer exhaust air directly from the outdoors via louvers without any tempering whatsoever. The winter design temperature in Michigan is -13 deg F so the air must be tempered somehow. I think it should even be cooled in the summer time from 90 degrees.
Even heating 2400 cfm to 40 degrees will require 130 MBH of heat.
There will be boilers available for hot water heating, but I don't know what the best way to temper the make-up air for the dryers in the winter time and summer time is without over complicating it.
Anybody have any experience with this ?
Thanks for your help.