Building a bridge to renewable energy
source: http://www.gizmag.com/solar-wind-bridge-concept/17771/
-
-
- bundlebear
- added this
The brainchild of Italian designers Francesco Colarossi, Giovanna Saracino and Luisa Saracino, the Solar Wind concept was designed for the Solar Park Works – Solar Highway competition that asked entrants to modernize sections of a decommissioned elevated highway stretching between Bagnera and Scilla in Italy.
The road surface would replace traditional asphalt with 20 km (12.4 miles) of “solar roadways” consisting of a dense grid of solar cells coated with a transparent and durable plastic coating providing 11.2 million kWh per year. The designers say this system, combined with the 26 wind turbines integrated underneath the bridge generating 36 million kWh per year, would provide enough electricity to power approximately 15,000 homes.
In addition to the “solar roadways,” the top surface of the bridge would also include a “green promenade” along its length comprising solar greenhouses for growing local produce. Drivers would be able to stop along the bridge to buy some fresh fruit and veggies while enjoying panoramic bridge views (an idea which strikes us as "a bridge too far" for this concept).
The Solar Wind entry was awarded second prize in the Solar Park Works – Solar Highway competition and the design clearly has merit. The integration of wind turbines into the underside of high altitude bridge exposed to constant strong winds seems like a particularly good idea – given that this could be achieved from a structural engineering point of view. Let's hope someone will see the concept and run with it.
http://www.gizmag.com/solar-wind-bridge-concept/17771/
-
- groups:
- Community, Green, Earth and Science, Technology, 5 more
-
- tags:
- Solar Power, Renewable Energy, Wind Power, Bridges, 1 more
-
-
good_stuff
-
The rendering shown doesn't have any generators attached to the wind turbines? These require frequent maintence, so there would also need to be access platforms and stairs. It would kind of make for an ugly bridge, don't you think?
- 1 year ago
-
good_stuff
-
-
Wetdog
-
good_stuff:
I can think of at least half a dozen ways to transfer energy from horizontal the vertical axis off the top of my head. The generators do not necessarily need to be placed on the horizontal axis----or even in the same location as the turbine blades.
I don't know for sure---however, I would suspect that the topography of the valley the bridge is spanning would direct the wind into the turbine blades----they probably do not even need to change directional orientation much, or at all.
- 1 year ago
-
Wetdog
-
-
mikem0487
-
I like this idea a lot. Maybe when we decide to revamp our infrastructure and have to replace bridges with new bridges that can hold more traffic, we can incorporate this into the design scheme helping us move towards a renewable energy future!!
- 1 year ago
-
mikem0487
