Aircuity has announced that its airside efficiency platform has been included in a retrofit project by the National Research Council of Canada (NRC). The NRC’s building in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan is utilizing two Aircuity Sensor Suites (SSTs) in its laboratory spaces and one SST for exhaust fan control.
“Over the last decade, airside efficiency has proved to be an energy efficiency conservation measure available for laboratory spaces,” says Dan Diehl, CEO at Aircuity.
“Implementing an energy retrofit project in a lab environment is challenging,” explains Mark Newman, energy management officer at the National Research Council. “But these same challenges also present the NRC with opportunities to conserve energy, reduce its environmental footprint and yield savings on operating costs.”
Aircuity’s smart platform saves energy, gives building users access to data about their spaces, and enables a healthy environment for occupants. The system improves cognitive function and productivity, reduces environmental health and safety risks and promotes sustainability initiatives as part of a smart building strategy.