Success Stories - Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center

Overview of Case Study

To achieve maximum results, focus on the critical few and not the non-trivial many, says James Larson, sustainability officer of Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center in Phoenix.

What Larson means is that some parts of a hospital, such as a chiller system, consume such a large percentage of a hospitals energy that maximizing the effectiveness of that system is a far better use of time and resources than focusing on less influential elements.

At his facility, one effort in that regard has been to convert the heating and domestic hot water from steam to condensing hot water boilers. The hot water boilers as a system operate at about 70 percent to 80 percent overall efficiency, compared to an estimated 10 to 20 percent efficiency for steam.

Read More

Related Resources

Guides/Reports
Using the Health Care Physical Environment to Prevent and Control Infection: A Best Practice Guide to Help Health Care Organizations Create Safe,
Monograph
Cut your health care facility's operational costs with our tips, tactics, and case studies for energy cost reduction.
Monograph
This monograph provides a detailed comparison between the 2000, 2012, 2015, and 2018 editions of NFPA 101: Life Safety Code簧 and the 2015 and 2018
Monograph
This monograph provides a step-by-step model for building a business case in support of energy resiliency investments in health care facilities. It