The Denver Post

Program energizes effort to lift buildings’ efficiency

- By Judith Kohler

The momentum seen nationally for a program designed to make commercial buildings more energy efficient is evident in Denver, with a locally based financier announcing an ambitious new venture and a California­based company unveiling a makeover for the Petroleum Building downtown.

Mark Boyer, president and CEO of Denverbase­d Lever Energy Capital, said his company has the ability to originate up to $500 million in financing for the Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy program, or CPACE.

Lever, the only Colorado company that finances projects through the program, is partnering with Crescent Real Estate, which has offices in Centennial and Fort Worth, Texas.

“We have a half billion in funding to put to work across the country, and we would love to put as much of that as possible to work in our own backyard, in Colorado,” Boyer said.

Sausalito, Calif.based CleanFund, one of the country’s leading providers of longterm financing for energy efficiency and other upgrades to commercial properties, announced Tuesday that it is financing a $1.1 million replace ment of the 62yearold Petroleum Building’s central HVAC chiller system, with help from the Colorado CPACE program.

The Property Assessed Clean Energy program began in 2009 in Berkeley, Calif., as a way, in part, to finance renewable energy systems on buildings, including houses. It uses capital from private providers to finance the upfront costs of installing renewable energy, upgrading buildings and making new buildings energy and water efficient from the start. The borrower repays the loan through a voluntary assessment on the property tax bill with repayment terms of up to 25 years.

Woolsey McKernon, CleanFund senior vice president and chief revenue officer, said the upgrade on the Petroleum Building is expected to make the building 12 percent more energy efficient and reduce annual carbon dioxide emissions by 1,384 tons, the equivalent of taking 296 gasfueled cars off the road.

Airconditi­oning systems giant Trane will install the improvemen­ts at the 14story, 197,1761square­foot building at 110 16th St.

The upgrade that will begin this

month on the Petroleum Building is part of the “super exciting” trend of the revitaliza­tion of the country’s core downtown areas, Woolsey said.

“From Akron all the way out here to the (San Francisco) Bay, we’re experienci­ng a resurgence in particular of old, iconic buildings being upgraded and CPACE is a wonderful tool to make that all happen,” Woolsey said.

In the case of the Petroleum Building, the name alone is exciting when talking about boosting energy efficiency, Woolsey added.

“You would think there was an irony there, but there really isn’t,” said Tim Borst, the building’s coowner.

The building has LEED Silver certificat­ion and the Petro Group, which owns the building, offsets 75 percent of its energy use through wind power, Borst said.

At one time, about 80 percent of the Petroleum Building’s tenants were oil companies, but now there are just a couple of oil companies. One of the major tenants is a solar energy company, Borst said.

The CPACE program requires much less capital outlay, Borst said. While the financing is a fixed rate, Borst said the interest rate tends to be higher.

“But when you look at the energy savings, it tends to offset the higher costs,” Borst added.

A majority of states, including Colorado, have passed legislatio­n authorizin­g the funding program, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. The CPACE program has helped overcome one of the biggest challenges to improving energy efficiency, adding renewable energy systems or making buildings more hurricane or earthquake resistant — high upfront costs.

The energy footprint of buildings is huge, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. The commercial and residentia­l sectors accounted for about 39 percent of the country’s energy consumptio­n in 2017, and most of that was related to buildings, the agency said.

Interest in reducing that energy footprint is growing, Boyer said. About 43 percent of the $587 million in projects financed since CPACE began was funded in 2017 alone, he said.

Ken Cope, founder and president of REthink Building Connection­s, said his company is working with Lever to turn a 17,000squaref­oot industrial building in Denver’s RiNo Art District into a 24,000squaref­oot coworking space for real estate profession­als. The plan is to demolish part of the building and add “a lot of indoor and outdoor elements,” including a glass facade and rooftop deck with vegetation inside and outside, he added.

The building, expected to be finished in May 2019, will also include energyand watereffic­ient features, Cope said, thanks to the CPACE program.

“Every step of the way we’re going to be going from a really completely, nonenergye­fficient building to some of the most energyeffi­cient standards we can achieve,” Cope said. “We’re going to keep some of the natural elements of the building. It has beautiful wood floors that we’re going to retain and refinish. We’ll put a whole lot more into insulation. We’ll completely replace the lighting and HVAC.”

Longterm financing can be tough to find, so the CPACE program, which has competitiv­e rates, is an important resource, he added. Many of the improvemen­ts can pay dividends in lower energy and water costs.

“I think some of it is the social responsibi­lity question as well,” he added. “You have to ask yourself isitworthi­ttometodel­iver a healthier environmen­t.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States