Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
Salt Lake City Boeing office
787-9 Horizontal Stabilizer in Salt Lake City Paint Facility
787-9 Horizontal Stabilizer in Salt Lake City Paint Facility
Solar Panels on Roof of Boeing South Carolina 787 Final Assembly Building
INMARSAT F2 South Solar Wing Deployement and Pyrotechnics Test
INMARSAT F2 South Solar Wing Deployment and Pyrotechnics Test
Solar Panels Atop Boeing South Carolina Facility
Inspecting Thuraya Solar Panel.
Boeing 787 Forward Section in Fabrication Tool
Solar Array of Boeing All-Electric Propulsion 702SP (Small Platform) Satellite ABS 3A
Solar Array of Boeing All-Electric Propulsion 702SP (Small Platform) Satellite ABS 3A
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Boeing Salt Lake Site Rooftop Solar Tubes
In October 2013, the 35,000-square-foot (3,251-square-meter) the Boeing Salt Lake site building, used for painting the 787-9 horizontal stabilizer, received LEED Silver certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.
To receive the LEED Silver certification, the building was designed to include numerous large windows, which are not commonly used in paint facilities; a rainwater collection system; recycled and salvaged building materials and enhanced environmental controls. But what makes the building stand out are the 3,600 rooftop solar tubes that provide heating for a portion of the paint operations. This addition also makes it the first Boeing paint facility to be partially heated by solar energy. Located on the roof of the building, thousands of solar tubes collect energy from the sun, which is used to heat water that is piped to the curing process.
The team expects that the elements incorporated to achieve LEED certification, including the solar power tubes, will lower energy use and operating costs. For the curing process, team members expect energy consumption to be reduced by seven percent.
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI44226
Boeing ID
slc_mg_1699
Type
Image
Size
3744px × 5616px 60MB
License type
RM
Keywords
2010s
blue skies
Boeing
copy space
day
environmentalism
factories
female
glare
green technologies
ground shots
high-tech / advanced
one person
perspective lines
shine
sun
sunshine
Restrictions