Established in 1879, just three years after Colorado became a state, the Colorado Historical Society has long served as the state’s memory keeper, occupying a number of buildings over the course of its 133-year history. By 2008, the society sought a new home and an opportunity to reinvent itself for audiences of the 21st century.

Changing its name to History Colorado, the organization began a monumental effort to imagine a new headquarters and a groundbreaking history museum in Denver’s Golden Triangle Museum District. In April 2012, the stunning 200,000-square-foot, $110 million History Colorado Center opened to the public with new exhibits and programs, blending artifacts, environments, media, and technology in immersive environments to showcase Colorado’s colorful stories.

Majestic and Memorable

It seemed fitting to design a remarkable building with exhibitions that would dare to capture the beauty and drama of America’s eighth largest state. Designed by Colorado architect David Tryba, of Denver-based Tryba Architects, the History Colorado Center’s architecture is meant to be as monumental as the museum’s ambitions, with expectations for LEED Gold certification, a high honor for a structure of this size.

The center’s high-tech and hands-on exhibits include multimedia programs, state-of-the-art technological displays, a media wall with 132 interlocking LCD screens showing a 10,000-year history of Colorado, a research center, and archival storage for more than 15 million items, including more than 750,000 photographs and 200,000 artifacts.

Protecting Nerve Centers

Craig Watts, a professional engineer with MKK Consulting Engineers in Denver, set the direction for the museum’s mechanical systems during the design phase. The team of MKK engineers was especially interested in finding a reliable, high-performance HVAC system to protect the museum’s eight vital nerve centers — four electrical rooms containing large transformers, switchgear, Cisco network equipment, lighting and breaker panels, and four data closets loaded with database servers, IP phone connectivity, fiberoptic equipment, an analog phone network, security equipment, and point-of-sale equipment.

With the constant heat gain from these eight centers, MKK needed a bulletproof, mission-critical system to keep the temperature in these rooms at the constant 76˚F required by the State Office of Information Technology (OIT).

These systems could not fail. A cooling failure in any one of these centers would have a disastrous impact not only on the loss of historical data, communications, and security systems, but also on the function of all the sophisticated museum exhibits — the large display screen in the grand atrium, amplifiers, DVD players, and the entire network of sound and lighting controls throughout the building.

MKK specified that the cooling system for these eight vital stations be separate from the large variable-air volume (VAV) mechanical systems that would cool and heat the museum’s offices, conference rooms, and exhibit, presentation, and common areas.

“It is critical to have the controls for these nerve center systems be entirely separate from the control systems of the rest of the building,” said chief building engineer Doug Crowell. “If the main VAV system fails, the IT, electrical, and AV rooms will not be impacted. In fact, to be really secure, we maintain a constant temperature of 67˚ in all these eight centers.”

Mission-Critical Cooling

Charles Landherr, commercial area sales manager for Mitsubishi Electric Cooling & Heating, Suwanee, Ga., urged Watts and his design team to consider specifying a variable-refrigerant flow (VRF) zoning system from Mitsubishi Electric equipped with a low-ambient cooling kit, which guarantees cooling operation down to -10°.

VRF zoning systems are ideal for applications that require precise temperature control. Mitsubishi Electric compressors use inverter-driven technology that responds instantly to minute indoor and outdoor temperature changes. These systems vary the compressor speed to meet load requirements and maintain the set point temperature.

Chris Zalinger, History Colorado Center project manager for RK Mechanical in Denver, explained that a common challenge with providing cooling for server rooms and electrical closets is that they are often spread throughout the building, as was the case with the History Colorado Center.

“Because of Mitsubishi Electric VRF systems’ flexibility and extremely long line lengths, designers can now combine these rooms on one system,” Zalinger said. “This approach helps save on installation costs by reducing the amount of equipment, electrical wiring, and piping on a project.”

“It made better sense to specify Mitsubishi Electric’s VRF zoning system because it can serve up to 50 indoor units with one outdoor unit, greatly reducing the number of condensing units on the roof,” Watts agreed. “This leads to a reduction of electrical connections and roof penetrations.”

Too Cool

Operating an air-cooled air conditioning system in cold weather — when the condensing unit is installed outdoors — presents a unique set of problems that must be overcome for the system to operate reliably over a wide range of weather conditions. One of the more important problems is maintaining adequate system head pressure due to reduction in temperature and uncontrollable winds blowing on the outdoor compressor.

The low-ambient cooling kit from Mitsubishi Electric includes rear and side wind deflectors and a hood with damper controls. The kit features an outside air sensor that controls the damper position on the hood. When the outside air temperature drops below 23°, the dampers will begin to close in pre-programmed increments, lowering airflow through the outdoor unit. The colder it gets, the more the dampers close, allowing reliable cooling operation down to subzero temperatures.

“I knew the kit was vital to the success of the data-protection installation,” Watts said. “It also became clear that a competitor’s system did not have the technology to meet this need. This was the right technology and engineering for the job.”

“With the introduction of the low-ambient cooling kit, Mitsubishi Electric extended the cooling operation down to -10˚F,” Zalinger added. “This is unquestionably a beneficial technology for use with small data centers and electrical closets that generate a constant heat load.”

“Even though we had record heat last summer in Denver, we have not had a single issue related to the units themselves,” Crowell said, adding that this is his first experience with a VRF system. “In my past work, our IT and server rooms were water-cooled using cooling towers, which were costly, very high maintenance, and took up a lot of real estate on the roof. I am pleased and impressed with the excellent performance of our Mitsubishi Electric VRF zoning systems.”

Publication date: 6/17/2013 

Want more HVAC industry news and information? Join The NEWS on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn today!