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Tag Archives: sustainable

Mark Group: exposing energy efficiencies in homes with thermal imaging [VIDEO]

Craig Rodgers, Mark Group Home Performance Advisor, uses a handheld thermal imaging device to check for temperature variation. Photo by Sarah Schu.

We often have a subtle struggle to be comfortable in our own homes. In the winter, we use layers and blankets, and in the summer, it all comes off to keep down those pesky utility bills.

This is where the Mark Group, which says home weatherization can still shape that struggle, comes in.

Philly Tech Week Green Tech Showcase Details: The Mark Group is one of four groups showing off environmentally-themed tech

When: Fri., April 29, 12-1 p.m.

Where: WHYY, 150 N. 6th Street, Old City

Price: FREE

Reserve your spot here

The Mark Group uses state-of-the-art technology to assess and improve a home’s energy efficiency, says spokeswoman Abby Feinstein. Currently the Mark Group uses a blower door, which is a high-speed fan that connects to the outside of the homeowner’s door and pulls air out of the house. By pulling air out of the house, the air pressure is lowered and higher pressured air from outside will begin to come in through any cracks and holes. This allows the homeowner to see exactly where sealing or insulation needs to be installed.

“One of the greatest barriers to scaling energy efficiency is awareness,” Feinstein says. “In the United States, people are not familiar with the levers they can pull to make their homes more energy efficient, which saves energy consumption and money.”


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City of Philadelphia Streets Department wins honors from Public Technology Institute

The City of Philadelphia earned three honors in the 2010-2011 Technology Solutions Awards competition from the  Public Technology Institute, a national membership organization for local government IT executives.

City initiatives won in the sustainability and the GIS categories and received a ‘Significant Achievement’ honor in the sustainability category as well.

  • GIS WIN: Optimizing Traffic Signal LED Installation Using Mobile GIS Technology: In 2010, the City of Philadelphia Streets Department Traffic Division began replacing over 70,000 incandescent traffic signal bulbs with energy saving Light Emitting Diodes (LED) modules, with funding by the American Resource and Recovery Act. To help manage this enormous effort, a mobile GIS solution was developed and deployed to enable field personnel to accurately track the replacement of these inefficient and undependable incandescent bulbs using GIS-enabled mobile technology. This project, funded by the American Resource and Recovery Act, also enabled field crews to track and maintain the City’s street pole inventory using scanning technology and edit capabilities native to the GIS mobile environment. Based on ESRI’s ArcGIS Server Mobile platform, this set of customized desktop tools also ensures data integrity as well as provides many advantages, including data standardization, GPS navigation, minimized paper use, and x/y coordinate locations with real-time efficiency. [This initiative started in July 2010, with more technical details here]
  • Sustainability WIN: Big Belly – Solar Powered Energy Improving Service: The Philadelphia Streets Department’s Sanitation Division employs the latest innovative technology to track maximum capacity and disposal of trash in bins better known as BigBelly Solar, solar-powered trash receptacles. This system features a wireless monitoring and management capability which creates staff efficiency through better deployment of crews and better management of personnel when planning collection routes and work zones. Software solution tracks all compaction and collection activity, allowing collection crews to maintain high service levels. [These trash cans were rolled out summer 2009]
  • Sustainability Significant Achievement: Maximizing Swift Reach Results for Maximum Communication: The Philadelphia Streets Department employs the latest innovative technology to disseminate information about the department’s services and programs to Philadelphia citizens. The service most frequently utilized is Swiftreach Networks Emergency Notification Service also known as Reverse 911. The service is used as a means of quickly and efficiently broadcasting recorded voice messages to citizens over the telephone simultaneously. The department has utilized this service to distribute thousands of messages ranging from emergency road closures to trash collection delays/changes. This service can be activated by advanced technology users, but, most importantly, activation can be done by any technologically challenged person from any location with an Internet-connected computer using a web-based notification control panel and/or remotely by phone. A call/campaign can be scheduled with two simple components, a call list and message to citizens within mere minutes.

Philadelphia could lose $149M in federal funding: Links

Solar States: Video of the Crane Arts Building solar array in Kensington

Solar States founder Micah Gold-Markel displaying March 2, 2011 the computer monitoring device connected to the solar array on the roof of the Crane Arts Building.

Solar States founder Micah Gold-Markel knows which of 450 solar panels his company operates on the roof of the Crane Arts Building in Kensington is performing best at any given moment. You might be able to guess by climbing up the black wrought iron ladder onto the roof and looking for cloud cover. Gold-Markel seems to like the computer monitoring device he has in the office below.

After kicking off last week what is billed as one of the city’s largest solar arrays to date — 81kw output at its best — Technically Philly visited for a tour of the array. Check out the city map tracking major solar projects — the Crane Arts building is there yet.

Below see video of Gold-Markel talking shop and showing off the view.


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Solar States: Philly’s largest photovoltaic solar array turned on at Crane Arts Building

Just seconds after Councilman Bill Green hurried off to another engagement, state Rep. Tony Payton flipped a mock switch with a solar startup founder, effectively kicking off the largest photovoltaic solar array in Philadelphia Thursday night.

Solar States founder Micah Gold-Markel told a group of more than 60 inside the Crane Arts Building in Kensington that it was a historic start. Back in June 2009, Solar States first applied for the state grant to adorn 450 solar panels to the top of the retrofitted artist community.

See a photo album of the install here. See video from Green, Payton and Gold-Markel below.


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Three ways your web development shop can be more eco-friendly: Yikes Inc.

A mock up of what the new Yikes offices on Girard Avenue in Fishtown could look like.

Tracy and Mia Levesque say they first started a so-called triple bottom-line company because they were selfish.

And, for them, Yikes Inc., their web design firm in Northern Liberties that is waiting on the completion of new LEED-certified offices in Fishtown, is keeping them happy.

“We wanted to create a company that we wanted to work for,” says Mia. “A lot of the things that make a socially resposible business starts with how you treat your employees, it’s about treating people first then profit.”

So, while the couple has built a web design shop that recently dropped a Penn Medicine Livestrong campaign site and has an e-commerce platform launching for another client soon, when you chat with the pair, they seem to be just as excited to talk about construction.

Specifically the construction of their new LEED-certified offices on Girard Avenue in Fishtown, which, when completed this July, just might be the first LEED rehab in the state. And the four apartments above will be among the first such designated rental spots in all of Philadelphia.

That puts them in a fine place to suggest how your small business can take smaller steps to being a bit more green-friendly, before you’re ready to buy a couple rowhomes for $348,000 and renovate them for $800,000, including architecture, certification and other soft costs.


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Links: Rittenhouse realtime search engine, PA tax credit stays alive and More

DEFINITE READS

Philly Tech News reports that five of Business Week’s 25 2009 Finalists for America’s Best Young Entrepreneurs have ties to Philly, four being based in the region, including Notehall, whom we recently profiled.

The Inquirer reports that 30,000 sustainable-building advocates are due to land in Center City come November 2010 as part of an international conference and, uhm, we’re already behind.

The Inquirer’s Joe DiStefano writes about regional native Evan Britton who has founded realtime search engine Sency and intends to move and base the company in Rittenhouse Square.

After the jump, now Boston is talking about the growth of their startup scene, Lockheed Martin invests in wave-energy and nearly 10 more tech stories you should see, including our best read piece of the week.


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TNT: Philly Electric Wheels to host opening reception, change transport in city

Afshin Kaighobady outside his new Mount Airy electric-assist bicycle shop on Oct. 8, 2009. Photo: Pam Rogow/for Technically Philly
Afshin Kaighobady outside his new Mount Airy electric-assist bicycle shop on Oct. 8, 2009. Photo: Pam Rogow for Technically Philly

It was a yellow bicycle. That much Afshin Kaighobady remembers clearly.

On cool mornings in 1969, the 10-year-old would ride to the bakery near his home in Tehran to buy his mother fresh bread. Riding on the flat roads of Iran’s sprawling capital city at the foot of the Tochal mountains, Kaighobady can still remember his pride for riding his bike with just one hand, the other clutching a warm piece of naan fresh out of the bakery’s diesel-powered flames.

Philly Electric Wheels Opening Reception

  • Thurs. Oct. 15
  • 2 p.m. to 7 p.m.
  • 550 Carpenter Lane
  • Mt. Airy
  • www.phillyew.com
  • 215.821.9266
  • Free test rides — Bring a major credit card, a helmet if possible and an ID (test drivers must be at least 16)
  • Refreshments and live music

“The steam would pour off it, and so one bite and then another and soon I’d half finish the bread that was nearly as tall as I was, all the while steering this long, yellow treasure,” he says.

It is there, in Tehran in 1969, that Kaighobady first fell in love with bicycles. It is here, in the far hillier expanses of Mt. Airy in 2009, that Kaighobady, now 50, is hoping to create love for that transport’s next generation.

This Thursday, from 2 to 7 p.m., he’s hosting an opening reception for Philly Electric Wheels, his shop in this northwest Philadelphia neighborhood that he boasts is the first store in Pennsylvania, perhaps even the tri-state area, to exclusively sell and service electric-assist bicycles.

And he’s trying to convince the region that these bikes could be a large part of a greener, more comfortable, more practical way to commute.

THE BICYCLES

Philly Electric Wheels or, yes, PHEW, if pressed, came to mind after Kaighobady watched his wife Meenal Raval use an electric bike to commute to work and found a buzz around her method of transport. Since opening his store Oct. 1, he’s spending his days offering free test rides — also available at this Thursday’s reception — to show people just how practical his bikes are.

“They have everything that is good about regular bicycles,” he says. “But with the option to have someone gently push you in the back when you’re going up a hill or speeding in bad weather.”

He currently stocks 16 models from four bicycle lines — Currie Technologies, EcoBike, eZee, Ultra Motor — all of which cost roughly a penny a mile to operate, range up to 40 miles per charge, can cruise as fast as 20 miles per hour and require no license.

Typical electric-assist bicycle rechargeable battery
Typical electric-assist bicycle rechargeable battery

The cheapest model he currently stocks is $500 — the starting cost of a new traditional bicycle at many bike shops — and the most expensive is $2,700. A removable battery powers the bikes and are plugged into the wall, to be charged as easily as a cell phone battery, though it’ll take five to six hours for most bikes.

All bicycles come with warranties, many including a one-year maintenance guarantee from Kaighobady himself.

And Kaighobady, with an engineering degree from the University of Bridgeport and a background in tinkering, is probably someone from whom you want a warranty.

HIS BACKGROUND

After leaving Iran in 1979 — unrelated to that country’s Islamist Revolution, he says, though that year “something big happened there” — Kaighobady followed family to Oklahoma City. He built a computer consultancy firm on the East Coast, and then moved to Mount Airy in 2000 with wife Meenal, a native of India.

“This neighborhood has been very good to us,” he says.

Afshin explainsHe’s been involved in a half-dozen eco-ventures, though PHEW is his first swing at retail. Since 2006, the couple has tried to create a low-carbon household, which fits well into living down the block from his store. Also, the store is located in Green on Greene, a mixed-use building with a mission of sustainability. An environmentally friendly household-products manufacturer is also based there.

Kaighobady has used his mechanical mind for greener transport before.

In July 2007, he finished making a homemade electric-powered Volkswagen Vanagon, and says two men who claimed to be Chevron employees in March 2006 paid $3,900 for a 1979 Jetta he rigged to run on a biodiesel from used fryer oil.

“But these bikes,” Kaighobady says, in his stark corner storefront, a half dozen store models carefully arrayed on the hardwood floor, “are really going to be part of the future.”

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Every Monday, Technically Not Tech will feature people, projects, and businesses that are involved with Philly’s tech scene, but aren’t necessarily technology focused. See others here.