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Cogeneration Plant—and Lots of Other Stuff
By Lainey S. Cronk
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There’s
an epidemic of hard hats and giant trucks on campus this summer—not
to mention the massive trench that’s being excavated right
through campus. It’s all a little mysterious to those of
us who are mere sitters-in-offices or drivers-through-campus. When
you talk to the people who have an “in” on the happenings,
they tell you all about excavators, about switching over to 12KV,
about condensate lines, and about trench details from A to V. Which
only adds to the mystery.
In layman’s terms, what it comes down to is this: a cogeneration
plant and an associated electrical upgrade—and lots of other
stuff.
The “other stuff” is what usually keeps physical plant
employees busy during the summer: replacing masses of dorm room
doors (for fire safety), carpeting in Newton, replacing galvanized
shower plumbing with copper in 18 Winning rooms (just in the nick
of time for Korean camp meeting), renovating rooms and bathrooms
in various dorms, repairing walls and lecture hall chairs, installing
a new projection screen in Fisher, repainting classrooms…
All these things are being done this summer. But over and above
it all is “The Cogen” —the new cogeneration plant
with its hefty building at the top of the hill and its 5-foot-wide
(and sometimes 9-foot-deep) trench running down through campus
and necessitating the temporary closure of College Avenue.
Dale Withers, supervisor of campus planning, design and waterworks,
usually spends his summers working on underground projects and
locks, keys and signage. But, like so many others on campus, Withers
is working on those projects on the side and devoting most of his
time to the electrical upgrade and The Cogen. “It’s
been an incredibly wild summer for us!” he says.
A high voltage upgrade on campus, Withers explains, has been ongoing
for the last three years. Now there’s a sudden rush to complete
it, since it must be in place for the cogeneration plant to function.
New transformers are popping up around campus, and electricians
are busy pulling in heavy cables. Power outages encompassing the
entire campus descend when the crews are ready to connect the new
system. (For some reason, they don’t want to do it while
the wires are live!)
Wither’s explanations are interrupted by a radio message
that a water line near Public Safety may have broken. He facilitates
the discussion between a physical plant worker and a Public Safety
officer, arranges for follow-up on the problem, and returns to
our conversation. “Crazier than it’s ever been!”
The scramble isn’t all bad. Though it can become overwhelming,
Withers says that some days it’s kind of fun. He recollects
with a grin when the trench was being dug down the steep hill behind
Public Safety. “The guy driving the excavator was great:
he was out there wearing his cowboy hat … and when he came
over that slope and the excavator started sliding sideways, he
didn’t bother to put on his seatbelt—he just lowered
the bucket, set his Big Gulp down behind him, turned up the stereo,
and kept going.”
So we keep sitting in our air-conditioned buildings and cars and
watch the hard hats bobbing through the campus, knowing there’s
an impressive world of action going on out there and admiring the
chic look that orange cones and DETOUR signs bring to PUC!
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