Posts Tagged ‘rainwater collection’

Would you visit a place like this?

I want to one day build the world’s first green theme park. I aspire to make all the rides generate electricity from the centrifugal force. For example, the ferris wheel, whirling dervish, looping starships, revolving gates, merry-go-round, carousel, tilt-o-whirls, and bumper cars could produce energy. I even want a gym with treadmills and stationary bikes that could do the same. Not to mention cranks that restless children can turn. I imagine the water rides could have stream engines that produce electricity as well. The blenders from all the smoothie bars could help, and the waste vegetable oil from the restaurants can fuel the rides. Needless to say, all the building rooftops could have solar panels and helical wind turbines. I even want the restrooms to generate electricity with methane digester toilets. Therefore, anytime someone takes a crap, they’ll be providing power to the theme park. Solar water heating, eaves, daylighting, ice coolers, passive ventilation, and rainwater collection would be everywhere. No green theme park can come without a green space. This idea encompasses a large biodome with several exotic species. Essentially, I want the entire output of this place to be equivalent to that of a power plant. Then several other theme parks can adopt this principle. Would you take your kids to a place like this? Last but not least, I have to decide which of the three cities I would build it in. It would have to be either New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles. Which is the most sensible locale
Hey You: Widespread use of ethanol sounds like a sexy idea, but in reality it’s impractical. It can’t replace gasoline as a dense energy source. It actually takes more energy to make ethanol than you get out of it. Further, that would cause the prices of corn to spike along with dairy and wheat products. Alas, ethanol is a corrosive material. Therefore, it can’t be transported through pipelines. The kind they use to replace diesel is actually E-85 which is 85 percent gasoline and 15 percent ethanol.

New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles?

I want to build the world’s first green theme park. I aspire to make every ride generate electricity. The ferris wheel, whirling dervish, looping starships, revolving gates, merry-go-round, carousel, tilt-o-whirls, and bumper cars could produce energy via centrifugal force. I want a gym with treadmills, stationary bikes, and turning cranks for restless children to do the same. Water rides could have stream engines that produce electricity, moreover. The blenders from all the smoothie bars and the waste vegetable oil from the restaurants can fuel the rides. All the building rooftops could have solar panels and helical wind turbines. I even want the restrooms to generate electricity with methane digester toilets. Therefore, anytime someone takes a crap, they’ll be providing power. Solar water heating, eaves, daylighting, ice coolers, passive ventilation, and rainwater collection would be everywhere. No green theme park can come without a green space. This idea encompasses a large biodome with several exotic species. I want the entire output of this place to be equivalent to that of a power plant. Then several other theme parks can adopt this principle. Alas, I must decide where to do the groundbreaking. My first choice would be in a city where cultural diffusion spreads. Therefore, it would have to be either New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles. Which is the most sensible location?

Would you support a law that mandates green buildings?

I have no objections towards self-sustaining buildings that more ecologically and environmentally friendly. Fewer things would thrill me more than to see the entire world go green. I support the enforcement of building codes that consist of the following.

solar panels
wind generators
passive ventilation
rainwater collection
super glass
geothermal heating pumps
solar water heating
green roofs with eaves
compact florescent bulbs
grass and trees

I think they should even require compost toilets with potable water that’s recycled and returned through a septic tank and incubator. They have building codes requiring bathrooms. You can no longer have an outhouse in your backyard. There was lots of social clamor when that happen, too. Further buildings are required to have fire exits, fire extinguishers, and sprinklers. Many of them are even required to have lightning rods. So if all these are included in building codes, I don’t see why my ideas should be excluded. Any thoughts on that?

How do you like these green building ideas?

I think they should make new building codes that incorporate all these ideas into new building codes

solar panels
wind generators
passive ventilation
rainwater collection
super glass
geothermal heating pumps
solar heating
eaves
compact florescent bulbs

There are building codes that require all buildings to have bathrooms and fire exits. You can no longer have an outhouse and just one door. If buildings have to abide by those standards, then there is no reason why they shouldn’t abide by these in my book. What do you think?