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Capital Cascade Connector Bridge

Pvilion collaborated with Figg Bridge Engineers to design, fabricate, and install the first solar-powered pedestrian bridge in the world.

The bridge was completed in early June, and now connects the Cascade Park and Capital Trail in Tallahassee, Florida. As a landmark, the solar bridge is at the forefront of Tallahassee’s economic growth. The bridge was engineered to serve a critical function beautifully and sustainably.

Pvilion and Figg partnered to engineer state-of-the art infrastructure; Pvilion designed the solar canopy to harvest solar energy and light Cascades Park, and Figg designed the bridge. The canopy was manufactured in Pvilion’s Brooklyn studio.

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Shading and Powering Seaglass Carousel Park

Pvilion installed umbrellas along the party area and line formation of the SeaGlass Carousel at the Battery Park Conversancy earlier this month.

Currently, the umbrellas provide beautiful shade around the Carousel. In the future, they will be equipped with solar arrays to generate electricity to charge phones in the line formation and shine light at night around the party area. The umbrellas were made with top-of-the-line Sunbrella fabric.

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Pvilion Designs Battery Conservancy Stands

We designed and built 100 custom tents for the Battery Conservancy’s Midsummer Fair on June 25th and 26th, celebrating the completion of the Battery Oval!

The weekend-long event engaged the public with the region’s biodiversity, showcasing local horticulturalists and agriculturalists, and emphasizing the connection between plant and food production.

Our tents provided shade and space for vendors, those who had been carefully selected by The Battery Conservancy’s advisory board for fulfilling alternative and sustainable production goals.

Each tent was 8’ wide and 10’ deep and covered with top-of- the-line Sunbrella fabric. The versatility of the tents lend themselves to future event use!

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Brooklyn Roasting Co. Coffee Cart!

Pvilion paired with Brooklyn Roasting to construct environmentally-conscious mobile coffee stations.

The coffee carts were made from both recycled and sustainable materials; the wooden frames were built from reclaimed basketball courts, and coffee is kept either iced or hot by Pvilion’s solar technology.

A four-point fabric tensile canopy equipped with a solar array stretches over the top of the cart, generating electricity and providing shade. The first cart was placed in the Brooklyn bridge park, near Deborah Kass’ yellow sculpture “YO/OY”.

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First Positive Net Energy Building in the Northeast

Pvilion has engineered, fabricated, and will install a solar wrapper for the Artists for Humanity Epicenter in Boston, Massachusetts.

Pvilion’s solar trellis wrapper will enhance the aesthetic of the building as well as harvest solar energy to power the building.

Artists for Humanity (AFH) is a non-profit youth center for art, science, and enterprise.  AFH’s mission is to bridge socio-economic divisions by employing talented and bright underserved high schoolers to provide creative and technical services to local businesses.

The wrapper is just one project in the Epicenter’s 52,000 square feet expansion, which will also make it the largest energy positive commercial facility on the East coast.

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Airbeam Technology Evolves from Natick to the Field to Carnegie Hall

Army.mil  |  Jane Benson, NSRDEC Public Affairs  |  January 26, 2015

NATICK, Mass. (Jan. 26, 2015) — The wide-reaching, overarching success of airbeam technology is music to Natick’s ears. The technology has made its debut in a new incarnation as a part of a surprisingly luxurious rental tent used for a gala on the rooftop of Carnegie Hall.

Airbeam technology consists of inflatable, high-pressure arches. The arches replace metal frames in tents and can be deployed rapidly. The airbeams come in small, lightweight packages. Large shelters and shelter complexes can be set up quickly and with fewer personnel than metal frames.

The Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center, NSRDEC, along with its industry partners, has a long history of developing the very best shelters to protect the nation’s Soldiers and their equipment. Many of the technologies developed by NSRDEC and industry for the military have directly and indirectly resulted in commercial applications.

Todd Dalland, co-founder and president of Pvilion of Brooklyn, New York, designed the groundbreaking rental shelter for the Carnegie Hall rooftop event.

“The special event tent that Pvilion designed and produced for the rooftop of Carnegie Hall in midtown Manhattan uses airbeams developed by Federal-Fabrics-Fibers for its structural supports instead of aluminum frames,” said Dalland. “This represents the first time that high-pressure airbeam technology has crossed over from military applications, associated with Natick, to commercial applications.”

“This was really an eye-opening demonstration of what this technology can do in the rental tent industry,” said Jean Hampel, team leader of the Fabrics Structures Team, part of NSRDEC’s Expeditionary Basing and Collective Protection Directorate, and a longtime expert in military airbeam shelters. “It shows the cost is coming down so it can be used in rental tents, and that’s a really big commercial application.”

Pvilion designed, engineered and produced the shelter, which is the first practical and affordable rental tent using high-pressure airbeams. The company enlisted Federal Fabrics-Fibers to fabricate the airbeams and Anchor Industries to fabricate the fabric top. Stamford Tent installed the shelter at Carnegie Hall.

“Since it’s on a rooftop, you can’t lay out many large pieces of framework,” said Hampel. “Basically, with this, you just unroll it, inflate, and it stands up on its own. This was a very unique capability.”

Pvilion began working on various types of shelters with Natick in the late 1980s. Pvilion has collaborated with Natick in three areas, including General Purpose Tents, Flexible PV Fabric Tents, and Airbeam-Support Tents. Pvilion has been involved in the development of high-pressure airbeams for more than 20 years. 

“I think Natick may be the best new tent technology incubator in the world,” said Dalland. “Natick has the best understanding of where military tents need to go in the future, and they are able to help support small, new tech companies with projects that move tents closer to Natick’s vision.”

Federal-Fabrics-Fibers of Lowell, Massachusetts, has also been involved in key textile technology collaborations with NSRDEC, including the airbeams used in the Pvilion tent.

NSRDEC, a pioneer in airbeam technology (and shelters in general), guides industry partners with its vast knowledge of military requirements and military textiles to oversee the technology development, the results of which have included airbeam-based military medical shelters, chem-bio protective shelters, aircraft shelters and expeditionary shelters.

“It’s safer than a metal frame tent in a storm,” said Hampel. “If you’re in a metal frame tent, you could have metal falling down on you or what’s stored in the tent. With airbeams, they’ll bend and pop back up. It’s a big advantage.”

Natick has been improving and perfecting airbeam technology since the 1970s and began working with Federal-Fabrics-Fibers in the early 1990s. The late Zvi Horovitz established Federal-Fabrics-Fibers with his wife, Bracha Horovitz, in 1991, and NSRDEC’s collaboration with Horovitz resulted in key innovations.

Hampel said that the circular loom used by Horovitz was much better suited for inflatable fabrics than the usual flat loom and that Horovitz developed a computer-controlled device that could weave a curve into a tube. The innovation greatly advanced and improved airbeam technology, making airbeam shelters more durable, easier to set up, move and maintain.

“As we were working with Zvi, we guided the research with our expertise in military textiles — it must be flame resistant, abrasion resistant, etc.,” said Hampel. “We added that knowledge to make sure we ended up with a product that would work in a military environment.”

NSRDEC and Federal-Fabrics-Fibers also overcame the big challenge of preventing air leaks through seams by creating seamless airbeams.

Bracha Horovitz serves as president and CEO of Federal-Fabrics-Fibers and continues the company’s dedication to serving the needs of both the military and commercial sector.

“Zvi was an innovative guy who generated the idea, and Bracha has kept the technology alive and made many improvements,” said Hampel.

“We feel exceptionally fortunate to have a successful relationship with NSRDEC and are proud to make such an impact in the world of military shelters in creating an automatic-deploying tent that fulfills the needs of our warfighters on expeditionary operations,” said David Retter, director of sales and marketing at Federal-Fabrics-Fibers.

Hampel has seen impressive developments in airbeam technology over the years. One application, in particular, stands out most in her mind.

“The Chemically and Biologically Protected Shelter, which incorporates Federal-Fabrics-Fibers airbeam technology, is the first type of medical facility that a Soldier would see in the field,” Hampel said. “These shelters were used during the first Gulf War and saved lives as they provided an environmentally conditioned environment, which prevented shock and provided a capability for advanced medical care.”

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The U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center is part of the U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, which has the mission to develop technology and engineering solutions for America’s Soldiers.

RDECOM is a major subordinate command of the U.S. Army Materiel Command. AMC is the Army’s premier provider of materiel readiness — technology, acquisition support, materiel development, logistics power projection, and sustainment — to the total force, across the spectrum of joint military operations. If a Soldier shoots it, drives it, flies it, wears it, eats it or communicates with it, AMC provides it.

See original article here

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Pvilion introduces PV-Powered, EV charging Solar Sail

Clean Energy Authority  |  Chris Meehan  |  April 2012 

There are numerous versions of PV-powered electric vehicle (EV) charging stations out there, but Pvilion’s new Solar Sail, introduced April 5 at Pflugerville’s Renewable Energy Park near Austin, Texas, is a bit different.

The array takes advantage of flexible solar PV by introducing a dynamic twist to the modules, which allows the PV canopy to take on a more fluid look than most PV canopies.

The solar sail is a 1.6-kilowatt PV array using Uni-Solar amorphous

silicon modules. It has level 1 (slow) and level 2 (faster) EV-charging capabilities, said Pvilion Co-Founder and President Todd Dalland. It’s able to charge up to two EVs a day.

When the system isn’t charging a car during the day, it’s feeding electricity to the grid. When charging a car at night, it draws electricity from the grid.

While the system is designed to be technology neutral, flexible PV modules are essential to its design, Dalland said.

“The main advantage is it enables us to deploy flexible modules on flexible structural material,” he said. “When they have a slight warp to them it adds to their stability—that and the visual appeal.”

The Pflugerville installation is the company’s first Solar Sail installation, according to Dalland. It has been operational since December and has been producing to expectations. And so far the response has been warm. Pvilion is already working on more orders although it was too early for Dalland to discuss where other projects would be located.

At this point the company is focused on building and selling more of the Solar Sails, although it could use the approach to design flexible PV arrays for other types of structures, according Dalland.

“It’s early days. A lot of the design alternatives haven’t been discovered yet,” he said. “We’re interested in deploying flexible modules on a variety of structural materials. Structural fabric is one we’ll look into in the future.”

The company could also look into making a solar tracker with flexible PV. But again, such a product would be in the future.