Chattanooga Times Free Press

The new, green pride of St. Patrick’s Cathedral is undergroun­d

- BY SHARON OTTERMAN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

NEW YORK — Above ground, a 7,855-pipe organ is one of the great splendors of St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue, the luminous church that will be the heart of the action in New York today, St. Patrick’s Day. But hidden below the cathedral’s floor, a new system of pipes just as intricate is a source of equal pride.

A year ago, as part of its nearly $200 million renovation, St. Patrick’s Cathedral launched a state-of-the-art geothermal heating and cooling system to replace its system of steam radiators and 1960s-era air conditioni­ng. Around the cathedral’s perimeter are now 10 wells as deep as 2,200 feet into the Manhattan bedrock, collecting ground water that helps the church efficientl­y heat and cool. The cathedral now reaches six times deeper than its Gothic spires soar high.

The system’s thousands of feet of pipes and dozens of pumps are invisible to the 5 million yearly visitors to the cathedral each year, and that was the point. The trustees of the 138-year-old building, the centerpiec­e of the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of New York, wanted the church to appear as it always has, even as it is going green.

“It was not only the most sustainabl­e, cost-effective, long-term energy option for the cathedral, but the option that best aligns with the greater good of New York, and not just today, but for generation­s to come,” said Monsignor Robert T. Ritchie, the rector of St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

Tucked amid the church’s side gardens on East 50th and East 51st Streets are 10 manholes, which cover the 8-inchwide wells that reach into the bedrock. Hidden behind radiator covers are dozens of fan coils that blow geothermal heat. High above the heads of visitors, in a gallery called the triforium, are 14 larger fan coil units that dump cool air down to sweltering summer visitors. And in the space under the church is a maze of pipes transporti­ng heated and chilled water through the system.

St. Patrick’s standing well geothermal project is the largest ever built in Manhattan, according to its designers. And despite its steep installati­on cost — about $35 million — the archdioces­e is hoping it will set a precedent for other buildings, particular­ly historical ones.

“If you are an institutio­n that isn’t going to be here for hundreds of years, you may do something less expensive,” said Jeffrey Murphy, who led a team from Murphy Burnham & Buttrick Architects in overseeing the cathedral’s restoratio­n. “But if you are interested in sustainabi­lity, and you are interested in the long haul, it is a great system.”

At the heart of St. Patrick’s new system is its geothermal plant, a tightly packed former boiler room under the church’s campus that is loaded with the pumps, compressor­s and other equipment.

A computer system automatica­lly determines whether to cool or heat based on thermostat­s set around the 76,000-squarefoot cathedral campus. It can switch various wells on and off, and it can heat some areas while cooling others. That is good news for Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, New York’s archbishop, who likes to keep the sanctuary “on the cooler side,” said Richard A. Sileo, a lead engineer of the system.

Four separate loops of water propel heat and cooling through the system, Sileo said. The first loop brings the ground water, measuring about 55 degrees year-round, from the wells into the geothermal plant. The second loop leads to a machine that cools the water down to about 45 degrees in summer, or heats it to about 130 degrees in winter. That water is then piped through the campus and into fan coils scattered around the buildings.

With a system this complex, its designers weren’t sure if it was going to work all the time. What about in a heat wave? Or in a cold snap? So they also installed a traditiona­l cooling tower and a natural gas boiler system as backup.

But the backup has not yet been necessary. Since the geothermal began running in February 2017, it has provided all of the cathedral’s heating and cooling. The project, designed by the Landmark Facilities Group and P.W. Grosser Consulting, won a 2018 honor from the New York Chapter of the American Council of Engineerin­g Companies.

The archdioces­e did not provide estimates for how much money it believes it saved this year, but the engineers estimate that it will reduce energy use over a traditiona­l system by about 30 percent annually. For St. Patrick’s, that totals roughly 94,000 kilograms in carbon dioxide emissions, or about as much created when burning 218 barrels of oil.

At St. Patrick’s, several options were presented to the archdioces­e during the renovation, but it determined that geothermal made the most sense, considerin­g aesthetics, longevity, the high cost of a new traditiona­l system, and the desire to do something green, Murphy said.

“I think it really showed a profound sense of optimism,” he added, “and in some ways audaciousn­ess, that this venerable institutio­n would consider geothermal technology for their building.”

 ?? MURPHY, BURNHAM & BUTTRICK ARCHITECTS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A rendering of new wells reaching as deep as 2,200 feet into the bedrock under St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. The state-ofthe-art geothermal heating and cooling system is part of a $200 million renovation. Votive candles at St. Patrick’s...
MURPHY, BURNHAM & BUTTRICK ARCHITECTS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES A rendering of new wells reaching as deep as 2,200 feet into the bedrock under St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan. The state-ofthe-art geothermal heating and cooling system is part of a $200 million renovation. Votive candles at St. Patrick’s...
 ?? JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan, installed a state-of-the-art geothermal system as part of a $200 million renovation. The cathedral’s perimeter is now circled by 10 wells as deep as 2,200 feet into the bedrock, collecting ground water to help the...
JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan, installed a state-of-the-art geothermal system as part of a $200 million renovation. The cathedral’s perimeter is now circled by 10 wells as deep as 2,200 feet into the bedrock, collecting ground water to help the...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States