Powering the World Trade Center Site
Powering the World Trade Center Site
Towers and train stations
Upon completion in 2013, 1 World Trade Center comprises office space, an observation deck, restaurants, and broadcast and antennae facilities. It will also include Siemens electrical power distribution products in 42 separate runs totaling 4,735 feet of power distribution busway and circuit protection (breakers and switches) used in the service and distribution switchboards.
In the separate World Trade Center Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) transportation hub, Siemens low voltage switchgear and automation products will power and control the emergency ventilation system. Part of Siemens Totally Integrated Power (TIP) and Totally Integrated Automation (TIA) architectures, these products can be integrated and adapted to meet the facility’s changing needs over the years.
Located close to the northeast corner of the World Trade Center site between Towers 2 and 3 and connecting the rail and subway lines, the transportation hub is designed to accommodate an estimated 250,000 commuters each day. Retractable, 150-foot-high glass-and-steel "wings" will allow natural light to pass through to the rail platforms 60 feet below street level.
The 9/11 Memorial Museum also will depend on a Siemens power distribution busway and circuit protection. Visitors to the museum will be presented with a sequence of experiences that allow for individual and personal encounters within an overall context of a historical narrative. The nature of the museum is such that the shell of the space, comprising existing foundations, the slurry wall and other in-situ elements of the site, is as much an artifact of 9/11 as the contents of the exhibitions. The museum area also includes two massive reflecting pools with waterfalls. With Delta Fountains of Jacksonville, Fla., Siemens is providing engineering, automation and pump flow control for these water features .
Siemens also is providing $1.7 million in building management controls for the World Trade Center site’s central chiller plant. Fueled by a unique river water condenser system connected to the Hudson River, the chiller plant will cool the transportation hub, 9/11 Memorial Museum and retail space in 1 World Trade Center.
Renee Robbins Bassett, rbassett@automationworld.com, is managing editor of Automation World. Reporting for this article was provided by Siemens and Sandra Tigert, Robert Jensen, Chris Lesnik, and Natalie Scannell
For More Information
“Engineering Ground Zero” is a Nova special report that aired on PBS stations. It covers the designing and building of One World Trade Center and the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum.











Comments(0)
Add new comment