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Geothermal system to put cool in school

Underground system expected to outlast building, official says










Its natural lighting, V-shaped hallways and loftlike design give a cutting edge vibe to the new Veterans Tribute Career and Technical Academy.

What's also cool is what can't be seen: a geothermal system of 180 wells buried 400 feet deep.


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They cool the building through a closed-loop system that sends hot water to be cooled beneath the Earth's surface.

For geothermal systems, the Earth "is the sink to deposit unwanted heat," said Paul Gerner, the associate superintendent of facilities for the Clark County School District.

"The green buzz is that you have to drill a hole into the Earth, but you save on electricity forever," said Don Dyer, the senior project manager for McCarthy Building Companies, the general contractor on the $59.8 million construction project, which is coming in $100,000 under budget.

But the costs of digging a hole are usually offset in the savings from not having to build the infrastructure for a conventional air-conditioning system, Gerner said. Water towers, roof-top air compressors and mechanical rooms, for instance, can all be "downsized" with geothermal systems.

If there are no construction savings, the "worst case scenario is that the payback is two to three years," Gerner said.

Geothermal systems reduce energy costs by 25 percent to 35 percent, Gerner said. At a high school, they reduce the amount of water needed for air conditioning by 500,000 to 700,000 gallons a year.

The systems are expected to last 100 years. So while the school building will have to be replaced in 50 years, the replacement school can simply be re-attached to the old geothermal system, he said.

The Northwest Career and Technical Academy, on Vegas Drive, just east of Martin Luther King Boulevard, was the first school to be built with a geothermal system in 2005. Seven schools will have such a system once construction is complete.

The other schools are Burkholder Middle School; East Career and Technical Academy; Virtual High School, which is part of the new Vegas PBS complex; Southwest Career and Technical Academy; and West Career and Technical Academy, which will open in August 2010.

Schools are selected for geothermal systems based on soil conditions. Plans for West Academy had to be modified because of hard earth underneath the school, Gerner said.

Like Veterans Tribute, Southwest Academy is one of the seven new schools to open on Aug. 24, the beginning of the school year. Both schools share the same building prototype because they were designed by the Pugsley, Simpson and Coulter architectural firm of Las Vegas.

Their similarities end there since Southwest, which is near the intersection of Windmill Lane and South Rainbow Boulevard, has a different vocational program with diverse classes such as interior design, nursing, dental assisting and video game technology.

While Southwest has a more eclectic program, Veterans Tribute focuses on vocational training for public service, such as law enforcement, 911 dispatch, emergency medical technicians and forensics. It even has a crime scene lab, said Susan Thornton, the assistant principal.

As part of the curriculum, students will be required to take four years of physical education and Spanish.

There is an outdoor obstacle course, but there's no gun range for the budding police officers.

School district policy forbids "live weapons" on campus.

Contact reporter James Haug at jhaug@reviewjournal.com or 702-374-7917.

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tweedledee wrote on July 15, 2009 10:13 PM: Fair and Balanced Fred. A little problem spelling fair today. Must be from all that heat from the fryers at the Burger King where you put in your time.


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Farir and Balanced Fred wrote on July 15, 2009 08:46 PM: No Free Lunch below sez: "Eventually the underground temperature will rise slightly from all this added heat, upsetting the environment. Geothermal cooling is not a free lunch!"

No Free Lunch should know. Nobody gets a free lunch while NFL is working the counter at Burger King.

As for geothermics, No Free lunch (as a typical Burger King AM radio Republicon, neo-con, narcissistic-con, anarchist-libertarian con, or some other breed of con) has only one variable to input for all of it's important mathematical calculations:

Would you like fries with that?

Bury the cons. They can't lead so they consistently mislead. They are the angry white males behind the counter at Burger King and Wendy's.


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Farir and Balanced Fred wrote on July 15, 2009 07:15 PM: Jon H. Please describe, in as much detail as possible, your expertise on this topic.


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No Free Lunch wrote on July 15, 2009 06:43 PM: Eventually the underground temperature will rise slightly from all this added heat, upsetting the environment. Geothermal cooling is not a free lunch!


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4ensics wrote on July 15, 2009 06:01 PM: UNLV had a Forensic program that went defunct. A majority of it's graduates can't get jobs with it alone. I would have to agree that the programs are a waste of energy, while the building saving energy is a cool thing. If only it focused on job sustainability.


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Don Best wrote on July 15, 2009 05:13 PM: Excuse me, but whenever I see a U-Haul, it is filling up to get OUT of town. But we have seven new school buildings opening up this fall? I guess we're just anticipating the arrival of our new immigrants from all over the world. What a great country. You know how it works-your country is a corrupt sh*t hole, so we'll just move to the USA....


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haug fan wrote on July 15, 2009 04:32 PM: Haug is a shill for the ccsd board. all he ever does is shill for them. his worst is some lightweight spitballs just to keep the public thinking that he's really a watchdog. did you know that he sits in ccsd's offices with a ccsd desk and a ccsd phone number? In a recent board meeting Gerner calls these architects the "CCSD architects cartel". Of course he's gonna give them praise. Nobody dare say "one of the most expensive schools ever built in Nevada". Because reporting the whole truth is not the plan.


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Aaron Hill wrote on July 15, 2009 03:11 PM: The CCSD can spend more money on projects without paper, pencils, and crayons for the kids. How many 14 year old high school studendents know what profession they want to pursue. What percentage will qualify for a police officer. The school was to be named Veterans Memorial, but the school board would not hear of it. The name Veterans Memorial was on the agenda, but the board ignored the will of the people and name it Veterans Tribute. Several Veterans group filed open meeting law violatios against the board. When election time comes around the Veterans will come out to vote. It is not about commmon sense, it's all about control. It's not about the kids it's all about the school board.


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All busted up wrote on July 15, 2009 11:17 AM: Only those as stupid as our beloved trustees, central office administrators and related cronies could come up with a plan to set up Veterans Tribute H.S. to train more cops. Where the hell is their head anyway?

Consider how many of our current h.s. students go to school dressed like hookers, pimps or dope dealers from Fremont Street and then image them completing such a curriculum and graduating and eventually become police officers...please, give me a break!

For police training will the district hire certified teachers or retired police officers? I image it will be retired metro officers since that only requires a G.E.D. not a college diploma

What is the exact curriculum expected of these alleged candidates for police work? MOst h.s. students can't participate in heavy physical activity anyway because of obesity will we be graduating 'FAT COPS'?


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Jon H. wrote on July 15, 2009 09:50 AM: Lets look at the economics of this:

Lets low ball the cost of each 400 foot deep well at $10,000 - $20,000 each . . . times . . . 180 geothermal wells and we arrive at a cost of 1.8 to 3.6 Million dollars.

This just to put in the geothermal wells, and nothing else.

Now, what was the calculated break-even point for this project?

Only Government can be so stupid.

After all, it's only money . . . and our tax dollars.

I can think of many sustainable designs that use passive desert vernacular architecture concepts that would reduce energy costs, far better (economically) than this does. In the 1960's the Egyptian Architect Hassen Fathy helped document those methods that do work in the desert.


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