crisleon
Electrical
- Feb 4, 2011
- 23
I would like to ask you about the real power consumption for the A-class office building.
The problem is that we designers have to prepare the application to the grid operator here in Warsaw, Poland, for technical conditions for supply for such a high-rise tower of about 70,000 sq. meters (total gross area in the over-ground part) plus about 10,000 sq. meters in the underground parking. Of course, the most important information is the power requirement for the whole property.
Roughly speaking our simplest formula states 100-120W/m2 for offices, what gives something like 7,500kW for everything (including air-conditioning, ventilation, lighting, computers etc.). More detailed calculations lead to the similar result and the simultaneity factor about 0,55-0,6 what we are likely to take into account.
However it seems to be a bit too much. My question is: how many kilowatts the Client should order in the utility company to be on the safe side (to cover all needs) and - what is not quite least important - not to have too big the due payment for the connection to the electrical network and future exploitation costs (the company will burden with payment for the readiness to the delivery of the energy at the given level of demanded power).
Have anybody true data from real experience and from power monitoring system? Available not from manuals or guides but just from real life? I’ll value all prompts and information (total power loads versus total gross area of the modern office building anywhere in the world).
The best regards.
The problem is that we designers have to prepare the application to the grid operator here in Warsaw, Poland, for technical conditions for supply for such a high-rise tower of about 70,000 sq. meters (total gross area in the over-ground part) plus about 10,000 sq. meters in the underground parking. Of course, the most important information is the power requirement for the whole property.
Roughly speaking our simplest formula states 100-120W/m2 for offices, what gives something like 7,500kW for everything (including air-conditioning, ventilation, lighting, computers etc.). More detailed calculations lead to the similar result and the simultaneity factor about 0,55-0,6 what we are likely to take into account.
However it seems to be a bit too much. My question is: how many kilowatts the Client should order in the utility company to be on the safe side (to cover all needs) and - what is not quite least important - not to have too big the due payment for the connection to the electrical network and future exploitation costs (the company will burden with payment for the readiness to the delivery of the energy at the given level of demanded power).
Have anybody true data from real experience and from power monitoring system? Available not from manuals or guides but just from real life? I’ll value all prompts and information (total power loads versus total gross area of the modern office building anywhere in the world).
The best regards.