Saddleback Church Refinery Lake Forest, CA
| Engineering Firms | P2S Engineering, Inc. Long Beach, CA H&P Systems, Inc. Lake Forest, CA |
| General Contractor | Saddleback Development Corporation Lake Forest, CA |
| Mechanical Contractor | Control Air Conditioning Anaheim, CA |
| Greenheck Representative | Norman S. Wright, Inc. Anaheim, CA |
| Printable Case Study (PDF) |

Saddleback Church Refinery is registered with the certification goal of
LEED® Certified Gold.
The LEED® Certification Mark is a registered trademark owned by the
U.S. Green Building Council® and is used with permission.
The Challenge
- Provide an energy efficient, reliable and low-maintenance way to exhaust air.
- Provide controllable fans that can be linked to the Building Management System for occupancy based ventilation control.
- Help support LEED requirements.
Construction on The Saddleback Church Refinery building began in June of 2006 and was completed in June of 2008. The new LEED Gold Certified, fully commissioned building serves as a campus resource and a community outreach for teens, college students and adults at the Saddleback Valley Community Church in Lake Forest, CA.
The building includes dining and kitchen facilities, a theater, game rooms, an 800-seat auditorium, a full court basketball gymnasium, a half-court practice area, three classrooms, and a multipurpose room for recreation and business meetings.
Craig Hofferber, executive vice president of the engineering firm H&P Systems, Inc. contacted Greenheck in June, 2006 to inquire about fans that could be controlled by a building management system (BMS). To save energy, Hofferber wanted to vary ventilation rates based on the time of day and occupancy of the rooms. Traditional fans run only at one speed and therefore cannot be varied based on demand. The main challenge was finding a cost effective fan that could run at multiple speeds. Single phase speed controlled fans using permanent split capacitor motors have limited turndown capabilities, and are inefficient at lower speeds. Using three-phase motors controlled by variable frequency drives were considered but found to be cost prohibitive for this application.
Greenheck's Solution
The following options were selected by H&P Systems, Inc. and Greenheck:
- Four Greenheck direct drive SQ-160 fans with Vari-Green motors.
- One Greenheck direct drive CUE-121-VG fan with Vari-Green motor.
- Control signals: 0-10 volt DC from EMS for start, stop and run speed.
- Five current transducers for sending fan status back to the EMS.
Greenheck fans with direct
drive Vari-Green motors are
cost-effective, energy efficient
and easy to control. The Vari-
Green motor is prewired with
control inputs so any controller
that can send a 0-10 volt DC
signal can start the fan and
adjust the speed from 350-1750
RPM. The fans were connected to
DDC controllers. The controllers
interface with the energy
management system (ERS) and
signal the fan to start and run
at minimum speed during off
hours and then ramp up when
the area becomes occupied.
Current transducers provide
feedback to the EMS system for
on/off status.
Electrical room exhaust and AV room transfer fans are silently controlled by analog 0-10 volt DC thermostats that monitor room temperature rise. Fans exhausting the rest rooms are controlled by the BMS to run at high speed during the day and reduce to a minimum exhaust rate when the building is unoccupied. Relief fans for economizer exhaust vary speed in response to building pressure caused by economizer system dampers. In this case, common relief fans exhaust excess air from the ceiling plenums in unison according to a single space pressure controller.
The Results
"The Saddleback staff is extremely happy, and we are happy with these fans as well," said Craig Hofferber, executive vice president of H&P Systems. "We no longer specify belt driven equipment unless direct drive fans are unavailable, and that rarely is the case. The fans we specify are variable speed with feedback capabilities so we know what they are doing in every given case."
All of the fans purchased for the Refinery have been installed and running for nearly two years now. They run maintenancefree and alarm the BMS when a problem develops. Saddleback Church has used Greenheck fans with electronically commutated motor technology in other buildings for over seven years to provide the controllability needed in small single-phase fan applications where control of pressure or flow is critical to providing quiet, reliable ventilation for the building.


