Though Charlotte is not a very windy city the innovative wind sources will still help, more needed, especially in the home of Duke energy.
Mar. 22, 2012 - Uptown Charlotte’s first wind turbines are spinning atop Packard Place, the funky 1920s car dealership at Church and Third streets that has been renovated into a space for entrepreneurs.
The two six-foot turbines don’t look like the familiar image of three-bladed windmills. They look like fans mounted on masts, vanes on either side pointing them into the wind.
Like the building’s abstract paint scheme, they’re something different uptown.
“What is that?” visitors want to know, said Packard Place director Adam Hill. What it is, he said, is the passion of building owner Dan Roselli for renewable energy.
A $311,000 grant from the State Energy Office helped turn the circa-1928 building into a model of energy innovation. It’s been certified by the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED, green-building program. Among its tenants are CLT Joules, an energy incubator. read more>>>
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