Heat recovery air conditioning and ventilation for London venue

  • 16 Mar 2015

Mitsubishi Electric Lossnay mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR) units to each floor as well as a City Multi R2 heat recovery air conditioning system at Garfield House.

etc.venues latest meeting and training venue

Garfield House on Edgware Road in London has been transformed into contemporary meeting and conference rooms for businesses to hire with 22 separate meeting spaces of varying sizes spread across the three levels plus breakout and coffee areas.

The modern design for venue hire company etc.venues means the air conditioning services are all on show, with ductwork runs and vents all part of the look and feel of the latest offering from venue hire company, etc Venues, which can host anything from large-scale events to training days and seminars.

Cool Systems Holdings, Mitsubishi Electric Business Solutions Partner and
specialist installer helped create a comfortable environment for users but a system that was also a part of the ambiance of the venue.

CS Group Technical Design Engineer Martin Lazovy: “There was nothing on the third floor when we started and only a couple of split systems on the first and second. We stripped everything out and started from an empty building. The brief was to ensure all services were exposed in line with the contemporary design the client was going for, which meant using exposed ducted fan coil units on the ceilings on each of the floors.”

Mitsubishi Electric Lossnay mechanical ventilation

CS supplied Mitsubishi Electric Lossnay mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR) units to each floor as well as a City Multi R2 heat recovery air conditioning system. The building’s server rooms, pantry and kitchen spaces were serviced with smaller split air conditioning units.

Developed and refined over the past 30 years, the Lossnay system has perfected the recovery of waste energy whilst delivering fresh air ventilation within any building.

Especially important in schools and offices, Lossnay can work in conjunction with Mitsubishi Electric air conditioning to maintain a comfortable and fresh environment. The units reduce overall energy costs by extracting stale air and then recovering the heating or cooling energy to either warm or cool incoming fresh air.

By utilising this energy, the Lossnay system can save up to 30 per cent on initial capital costs of heating and cooling plant.

A total of 21 Lossnay units varying from the LGH-50RX5-E to the larger LGH-100RX5-E have been deployed at Garfield House. This commercially orientated system can be utilised virtually anywhere to extract stale air and then recover the heating or cooling energy to either warm or cool incoming fresh air.

Heat recovery air conditioning

The heat recovery air conditioning is delivered by two R410A City Multi units. Many buildings require cooling in some areas and heating in others even in adjacent rooms.

The outstanding City Multi R2 system meets this requirement by distributing surplus heat from cooling operations (and vice versa) to rooms where it is needed. This efficiency can result in energy savings of up to 30 per cent over conventional systems.

The system installed at Garfield House all feeds into Mitsubishi Electric’s advanced AG150 centralised controller, which can also interlock with the Lossnay ventilation system.

The AG150 is a very cost effective 9 inch touch screen centralised controller. The panel can control up to 50 devices, with the functionality to monitor energy use, set daily timers and instigate night setback. In addition, set point upper and lower limits can be established and refrigerant volumes can be checked via the interface.

Remote control is also provided by standard PAR31 MAA panels throughout the building’s various rooms. The clear back-lit display and simple functions of daily and weekly timer control make for a very simple user interface. Remote PAC-SE41TS sensors have also been installed in areas with no remote controller.

Monitoring and control

The entire installation is also primed to be linked up to Mitsubishi Electric’s forthcoming Remote Management Interface (RMI) that will enable monitoring and control from iPhone and other smart devices.

Mitsubishi Electric Living Systems,
Travellers Lane,
Hatfield,
Hertfordshire,
AL10 8XB
United Kingdom

Visit Mitsubishi Electric Living System's website

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