Building resiliency and community at the YMCA of Greater Toronto

Building resiliency and community at the YMCA of Greater Toronto

BUILDING RESILIENCY AND COMMUNITY AT THE YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

summary

The YMCA of Greater Toronto is working to reduce its carbon footprint and increase their resiliency so they can continue supporting the community even (and especially) during times of emergency. District energy was considered during the design of the charity’s Cooper Koo Family YMCA in the West Don Lands of Toronto. This facility was a legacy project of the Toronto 2015 Pan Am/Parapan American Games Athletes’ Village. Waterfront Toronto’s initial plan for the neighbourhood included district energy. A few district energy pipes were even installed before the plan was abandoned to meet tight construction timelines. With many new developments planned for the neighbourhood, the YMCA is currently engaging partners in the community to build on Waterfront Toronto’s work to realize a resilient and low-carbon community energy system for the West Don Lands.

Roles

  • YMCA of Greater Toronto – Project lead and host organization
  • Mantle314 – Project manager
  • Prime Strategy & Planning – Planning lead
  • Opus One Energy Solutions – Technical lead
  • QUEST Canada – District energy lead
  • Natural Resources Canada – Funding and resource partner

Location

  • West Don Lands, Toronto.
  • The initial neighbourhood phases were built as the 2015 Pan Am/Parapan American Games Athletes’ Village and housed 10,000 athletes on 14 hectares (35 acres).
  • After the Games were completed, the neighbourhood transitioned into a residential community featuring condominiums, affordable housing, George Brown College’s first student residence, the Toronto region’s newest YMCA health and fitness location, and new retail and restaurant spaces.
  • The neighbourhood is undergoing a construction boom, with many new residential and commercial buildings planned over the next decade.

The Challenge

The YMCA of Greater Toronto strives to be a leader in supporting the local community and recognized its ongoing support would be challenged during times of emergency disruptions such as floods and ice storms, which are increasing due to climate change.

The charity first focused on reducing its carbon footprint and is now also focusing on increasing its resiliency. The YMCA of Greater Toronto is working to turn its facilities into a network of Community Resilience Centres. The YMCA is installing high-efficiency backup power systems to reduce the carbon footprint of its owned buildings while allowing these locations to remain operational during extended electricity grid power failures.

The Cooper Koo Family YMCA provided a unique opportunity because it is located in a fast-developing and high-density neighbourhood where the initial district energy vision and work by Waterfront Toronto could be built upon.

For the Y, the path to success was not clear, but it realized it needed to take a leadership role to coordinate effort across governments, institutions and the private sector.

THE SOLUTION

The YMCA anchors and facilitates the district energy vision

The West Don Lands in Toronto was home to the Athletes’ Village for Toronto 2015 Pan/Parapan American Games. District energy formed a part of the original vision for the village but had to be abandoned mid-development to meet the tight construction timelines required by the Games. District energy pipes were laid connecting roughly eight construction blocks south of the YMCA and four blocks in the north east corner of the West Don Lands.

With the games successfully over, the Y wanted to help inform the vision for the next phase of the neighbourhood’s development. With a district energy foundation in place and over a dozen new developments coming to the neighbourhood over the coming decade, the YMCA got to work to see if it could help support the achievement of Waterfront Toronto’s original vision for a community energy system.

Getting district energy-ready with support

Working with its climate strategy consultants, Mantle314, the YMCA received funding from Natural Resources Canada to explore strategies for developing a resilient, low-carbon community energy system in the West Don Lands. Through the funding, the YMCA created a project team and advisory team consisting of leading strategists, planning experts, and technical experts to help guide its planning and engagement, while at the same time sharing their lessons learned, including developing this website.

Planning and engagement continues

The City of Toronto developed guidelines for building developers and owners, architects, and engineers to support the design of buildings that are ready for connection to a district energy system (“DE-ready”). However, the city generally has no requirement that buildings be DE-ready in areas where the district energy potential is high.

The YMCA is meeting with local developers and utilities to build a coalition behind the project and has signaled its interest as a technology host; the work continues. The Y hopes the dialogue between neighbours will lead to a future low-carbon, resilient community-energy system while strengthening the bonds of the community and protecting it against future energy disruptions. This case study will continue to be updated as new developments arise.

Creating a resilience node

The YMCA’s vision for the West Don Lands district energy system is focused on being one low-carbon and resilient node among many. Developed in partnership with Waterfront Toronto, Infrastructure Ontario, and the Province of Ontario, the Cooper Koo Family YMCA located at 461 Cherry Street is a LEED Gold building, housing a large green roof, and a micro-grid including seven electric vehicle charging stations, a battery back-up and a small solar array.

The Y is also working to install a high efficiency combined heat and power (CHP) generator along with additional solar panel and battery capacity – enough to remain operational in a blackout – at the Cooper Koo Family YMCA.

COMBINED HEAT AND POWER (CHP)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES Charging

BATTERIES

SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC

The Results

The results are pending further developments.

Stats

Since 2008, across their portfolio of owned facilities, the YMCA of Greater Toronto has achieved the following reductions:

%

Carbon footprint

%

Energy Spending

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CONTACT YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

ADDRESS - YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

2200 Yonge St., Unit 300
Toronto, Ontario, M4S 2C6

PHONE - YMCA of Greater Toronto

Toll Free: 1-800-223-8024
Fax: 416-928-2030

WASTE SEWER HEAT POWERS VANCOUVER’S SOUTHEAST FALSE CREEK COMMUNITY

WASTE SEWER HEAT POWERS VANCOUVER’S SOUTHEAST FALSE CREEK COMMUNITY

Waste sewer heat powers Vancouver’s Southeast False Creek community

summary

The City of Vancouver used the Vancouver Olympics as a catalyst for a legacy development to rehabilitate former industrial lands with an environmentally friendly athletes village turned mix-used community. After public pushback, the projected select waste-heat recovery to power the project over the lower cost and GHG biomass option. The Southeast False Creek Neighbourhood Energy Utility is the first in North America that recovers waste heat from a wastewater treatment system to supply heating energy and hot water to mixed-use buildings.

Roles

  • The City of Vancouver owns and operates the facility.
  • The provincial government provided a grant, the federal government made a loan available and the city provided funds through their Capital Financing Fund.
  • FVB Energy Inc. supplied the technical expertise and supported the design and implementation of the facility.
  • The Millenium Development Group was in charge of developing the infrastructure required for the facility.

Location

The Southeast False Creek (SEFC) development is situated on the south side of False Creek in Vancouver, British Columbia. Originally designed as a mixed-use community with an estimated population of 11,000-13,000 people housed in a residential neighbourhood. Some of the buildings were part of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics Athletes Village. Built on a 32 hectare brownfield historically housing rail-yards and ship-yards. The area covers an estimated 6 million square feet.

The Challenge

Some residents had a negative perception of the original plan for a biomass plant and some concerns over the sewer heat recovery system because the technology was relatively unknown to the community. Neighbourhood associations voiced concerns over the housing of an industrial energy facility amidst a dense residential neighbourhood. Concerns voiced by the community included possibility of odour, air pollution and contamination and the unaesthetic presence of industrial smokestacks.

Developers, facing mandatory connection, had some apprehensions about the costs associated with the heating systems when compared to the business as usual electric heating systems.

The City of Vancouver, being the sole owner of the project, had to assume risks related to high capital costs that are associated with district energy projects.

THE SOLUTION

Managing public expectations in tight timelines

The Southeast False Creek development was conceived as a legacy project of the Vancouver 2010 Olympics. The Olympics providing a catalyst to develop a sustainable neighbourhood in the polluted brownlands at the heart of Vancouver’s growing core. The massive plan to clean up and build the games’ athletes village also brought tight construction timelines for the development and the district energy system.

The original plan to use a biomass plant to provide heat was the lower cost and lower GHG option, but was abandoned for a sewer heat recovery system as a result of public opposition over concerns around air quality and potential delays from regional government approvals. With the tight Olympic games timelines, the city pivoted their technological approach. The city ran a steering committee consisting of various city departments (finance, legal, planning, engineering) simplifying the project coordination.

The city conducted two rounds of public engagement to address the concerns of the local community and other stakeholders. After the pushback over plans for biomass, the city formed neighbourhood committees with neighbourhood associations and hosted public forums to explain the reasoning behind and benefits of the project.

To assuage concerns over the look of the natural gas boilers, the city commissioned local artists to turn the natural gas boiler stacks, deemed to be unsightly, into works of art.

Controlling and mitigating the high capital costs

The rates for the project were similar to a traditional utility with revenue coming from the customer base. The city implemented a mandatory connection requirement to reduce the risk of and improve the economies of scale of the project. The city also ran deficits during the early years to make the project cost-competitive in the short-term.

The city carried out the construction and procurement of expensive equipment in stages to mitigate the high capital costs. The plant capacity and construction was staged to align with the evolution of the project’s development. The city provided additional capacity to the system when new neighbourhood buildings were constructed. This helped delay the most capital intensive portion of the project towards the end of the build-out when higher customer demand (and revenue) was present, making for more favourable economics.

Photo Credit: Alfred Hermida

Waste heat warms the community’s showers and sinks

Heat is recovered from untreated urban wastewater at the Southeast False Creek Energy Centre and heat pumps are used to transfer the energy to a closed-loop hot water distribution system. An insulated closed-loop underground piping system circulates the hot water heated from the sewage recovery around the neighbourhood to be used in the showers and sinks of the community.

Sewage heat recovery systems, though similar to regular geothermal ground source heat pumps, are more efficient because the sewage runs hotter and installation is cheaper. During the coldest nights of the year, the heat pumps are supplemented with high-efficiency natural gas boilers to achieve optimal heating levels. The heat pump technology heats the water to about 65°C, which is sufficient for residential space heating and domestic water heating.

Each connected building has its own energy transfer station to exchange energy with the circulating water loop. At the same time, they monitor the building’s energy consumption using a metering system. Each building’s energy transfer system delivers space heating and domestic hot water to the individual units. The facility can be adapted to accommodate various other renewable energy sources and can therefore provide the flexibility to deal with future advances in technology, energy security and affordability. Previously tested and flexible systems helped in the smooth running of the facility with minimal technical glitches.

Heat Recovery

Photo Credit: Alfred Hermida

The Results

The planned system expansion will serve over 2,100,000 m2 of development at full build-out, with GHG savings forecast at 14,000 tons of CO2-equivalent per year.

Stats

%

Anticipated reduction in GHG emissions

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CONTACT YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

ADDRESS - YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

2200 Yonge St., Unit 300
Toronto, Ontario, M4S 2C6

PHONE - YMCA of Greater Toronto

Toll Free: 1-800-223-8024
Fax: 416-928-2030

STRATHCONA COUNTY ADAPTS PLANS TO SERVICE THE COMMUNITY

STRATHCONA COUNTY ADAPTS PLANS TO SERVICE THE COMMUNITY

Strathcona County adapts plans to service the community

summary

The Strathcona County Community Energy System (SCCES) is located in the central area of Sherwood Park in Alberta. It provides space heating and hot water to the multi-use, pedestrian-friendly community hub. The county had to adapt their plans when provincial regulation made combined heat and power (CHP) cost prohibitive and a grant was rejected boosting the project’s debt load. The modular design allowed the county to add a biomass fuel plant later in the project to further reduce carbon emissions.

Roles

  • Strathcona County owns and operates the Integrated Community Energy System (ICES).
  • The residential development in the community hub is taken care of by Christenson Developments, while
  • FVB Energy is the energy services company in charge of the project.
  • Funding for the project came from federal as well as provincial sources – Provincial loan (ME First! Program by the Alberta Municipal Affairs & Alberta Government); Federal grant (Federal Gas Tax Program); Alberta Capital Finance Authority loan.

Location

The Strathcona County Community Energy Systems (SCCES) is located in the Centre in the Park (CITP) development, in the central area of Sherwood Park, Alberta. The SCCES heats and delivers water to – Strathcona County Hall, Strathcona Community Centre, Festival Place, the Kinsmen Leisure Centre, Sherwood Park Arena, the Recreation Administration Building and 3 private buildings. The community hub covers a total of around 680 residential units, spanning over 60,000 sq ft of commercial and retail space.

The Challenge

The Strathcona County faced large payments associated with the debt they incurred to finance the project, while at the same time faced challenges generating revenue from new customers through their voluntary connection policy.

The project also explored using Combined Heat and Power system to generate electricity from their natural gas boiler, but faced a lack of regulation at the provincial level for the generation and distribution of electricity,

THE SOLUTION

The objective of the broader development plan was to build a sustainable village with social, economic and environmental factors as the pillars for its design and development. The district energy system was viewed by the county as a way to lower energy consumption, reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and provide a healthier environment. Community consultations held during the design phase of the development helped build buy-in from potential customers and residents.

Managing a heavy debt load

The county did extensive financial modelling to determine the economic feasibility of the project, but were not able to secure one of their grants, coupled with longer than expected construction timelines increased the county’s debt load, shifting the cost recovery projection from 15 to 22 years.

By charging the energy system connection fee to the developer, Strathcona County ensured that customers would see a reduction in the fixed price portion of the bill, which typically would not be the case if the connection cost was to be shared by the customer.

Planning for new customers and technology

The community energy centre, a LEED® Silver system, was strategically placed as close as feasible to potential future customers to reduce costs. The system was designed to be modular, making it easier to add low-carbon technologies in the future, such as combined heat and power (CHP) and biomass boiler. The diverse technologies would provide an insulation against potential natural gas fuel volatility, while also reducing their greenhouse gas emissions.

When first designed, the county wanted to add CHP right away, but had to abandon plans because the province of Alberta’s regulations would have required the same level of environmental review as a major power plant. The regulations were later updated in 2008, but after the project was completed. Since launching, the county has added biomass to

A High-efficiency natural gas boiler

Water is heated by natural gas in the Energy Centre and the heat is transferred with the help of a plate heat exchanger. The current installation consists of a 1 MW condensing boiler, a 3 MW hot water tube boiler and 5 MW hot water tube boiler. There is space available to further add an 8 MW hot water tube boiler if required. The returning water is about 15°C cooler than when it left and is then reheated and re-distributed. In winter, the heated water is used for space heating whereas, in summer, it is primarily used as domestic hot water only.

Modular design brings biomass on-line

The community energy system is designed to operate as a control plant for additional energy system components (including biomass) – reducing the cost of future ICES developments. Later in the project, Strathcona County Utilities received grants to install a biomass boiler module. The biomass plant burns agriculture residues (such as oat hulls) and wood waste (from the commercial and construction and demolition sector).

Natural Gas

Biomass

The Results

Original GHG Reduction estimates were based on a comparison with the pre-existing (older) boilers within the existing buildings.  With the connection of the newly constructed buildings, which would include newer vintage of boilers, a comparison between plant efficiency and newer technology boilers is not available.

 

Stats

  • Reduction of 2,2000 tonnes of GHG emissions annually (1,200 is from the biomass plant)
  • Significant reduction in air pollutants.

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Toll Free: (866) 494-2770
Fax: (866) 494-2770

CONTACT YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

ADDRESS - YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

2200 Yonge St., Unit 300
Toronto, Ontario, M4S 2C6

PHONE - YMCA of Greater Toronto

Toll Free: 1-800-223-8024
Fax: 416-928-2030

ALDERNEY 5 EXPERIMENTAL SEAWATER PROJECT COOLS MUNICIPAL BUILDINGS IN HALIFAX

ALDERNEY 5 EXPERIMENTAL SEAWATER PROJECT COOLS MUNICIPAL BUILDINGS IN HALIFAX

Alderney 5 experimental seawater project cools municipal buildings in Halifax

summary

Halifax Regional Municipality needed to replace their obsolete and CFC polluting cooling system. The were approached by ENvironment Canada to test innovative low-carbon technology, aligning with their need to cut carbon emissions. The Alderney 5 district cooling project utilizes a seawater-based cooling system for a municipal building complex. The technology stores the winter-time cold water from the Halifax harbour with an innovative borehole field that stores “cold energy” for summertime use. The project provides enough cool air in the summer to meet demand.

Roles

  • The Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) owns the Alderney 5 project.
  • The projected was funded through a variety of government channels and funding programs such as the Federation of Canadian Municipalities’ Green Municipal Fund; Sustainable Community Reserve; Environment Canada; Nova Scotia Department of Energy; NRCAN – Energy Innovators Program.
  • SNC-Lavalin (later known as HPES – High Performance Energy Systems) provided the mechanical and electrical engineering work for the first phase and was then taken over by the HRM’s in-house technical team.

Location

The ‘Alderney 5 Energy Project’ is comprised of five municipal buildings – Alderney Gate, Alderney Library, Old Dartmouth City Hall, Alderney Landing and the Dartmouth Ferry terminal, covering a total area of approximately 31,000 m2 on the Dartmouth waterfront in Nova Scotia.

The Challenge

As a result of the Montreal Protocol, ratified in 1989, many refrigerants and cooling technologies became obsolete, including the CFC-11 and HCFC-22 that was previously in use at the Alderney site. With growing need to adapt to changing regulations and impending costs, a district cooling system was considered to be the most practical and efficient solution.

The riskiest stage of the project was the inclusion of the geothermal borehole field which was proposed in order to ‘store’ cold energy during the winter months. This was a previously untested technology at this scale and if it succeeded, it would become the first commercial project using this technology.

As well, while the project progressed, the Halifax Regional Municipality took on the role of general contractor after the contract was cancelled.

THE SOLUTION

New technology lines up with government planning

Halifax’s regional government had developed a corporate plan to reduce carbon emissions by 20% below 2002 levels by 2012 and their community Energy Plan called for using renewable energy sources of energy. When Environment Canada approached the region about participating in a pilot project to test new geothermal cooling technology, the approached lined up with their planning documents and need to change their cooling system

Keeping the public engaged and updated

To keep stakeholder and the public up to date on the project, the region disseminated information about the project through a regularly updated website. They also maintained a “Geo-Vault”, housing the pump, filters, and valves for the public to familiarize themselves with project and underlying low-carbon technology.

A strong team managed through adversity

A council sub-committee acted as a steering committee throughout the project’s development. To manage the project after a change in lead contractor, a well rounded team of highly qualified personnel, spanning across departments (technical, financial, and legal), effectively collaborated with federal departments with a greater depth of technical resources.

 

First commercial scale deployment of underground thermal energy storage

The Alderney 5 Energy Project used natural gas, efficiency strategies and geothermal technology. The project’s cooling technology provides cooling for the municipal building complex around the Dartmouth City Hall in Halifax, eliminating the use of refrigerant-based cooling technologies in the summer months. The project’s Underground Thermal Energy Storage (UTES) system is the first in the world to store cold energy. During the winter, titanium heat exchangers extract cold energy from the Halifax Harbour. This cold energy is then stored for seven months in a geothermal borehole field underneath the adjacent parking lot to be used to cool buildings in the summer months.

The borehole technology uses a new design wherein 100-120 borehole at 600 feet deep are found to be nearly 300% more efficient than traditional U-tube boreholes. This borehole design enables cold energy to be stored in the rock mass and used directly for air conditioning without the use of heat pumps.

In ‘charging mode’, cold seawater pumped through a heat exchanger chills a freshwater and glycol mixture. This is then pumped through the underground borehole field which captures the heat energy of the bedrock, lowering the temperature of the borehole field.

In the ‘discharging mode’, freshwater is pumped through the chilled bedrock where it is cooled. This chilled water is then used to provide for air cooling in the Alderney 5 buildings. Warmed freshwater is returned to the borehole field where heat energy is removed and water is again chilled for the next cycle.

Retrofits to increase energy efficiency

The project also involved the integration of three traditional retrofit technologies – installation of low flow aerators and automatic shut-off valves, installation of efficient lighting fixtures and switching the fuel for the heating system from conventional fuel oil to natural gas. These measures resulted in substantial cost savings as well as reduction in GHG emissions.

 

Natural Gas

Geothermal

The Results

Ten years on, the Alderney 5 project has experienced its share of bumps along the road. The new technology is servicing fewer buildings than originally planned, requires the use of backup chillers, and requires repairs than expected of the pumps located offshore.

The Stats

The stats were projected and are outdated. They may not reflect the current experience.

  • Eliminating the use of furnace oil (410,000 litres of furnace oil annually)
  • Eliminating the use of CFC based refrigerants (900 kg)
  • Reduction of GHG emissions (estimated – 900 tonnes of CO2 emissions annually)
  • Over the twenty year period, the Alderney 5 Energy Project, would save over $6,900,000.

Contact Quest Canada

Visit Us

350 Albert Street, Suite 1220
Ottawa, ON K1R 1A4

Call Us

Toll Free: (866) 494-2770
Fax: (866) 494-2770

CONTACT YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

ADDRESS - YMCA OF GREATER TORONTO

2200 Yonge St., Unit 300
Toronto, Ontario, M4S 2C6

PHONE - YMCA of Greater Toronto

Toll Free: 1-800-223-8024
Fax: 416-928-2030