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Trial of Flygt Adaptive Mixers Shows Energy and Cost Saving in New Plymouth, New Zealand
Xylem collaborated with the New Plymouth District Council to trial the innovative Flygt Adaptive technology, replacing two existing mixers in the anoxic zone of bioreactors.
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Tuas Power Singapore identifies and eliminates harmful transients to improve system reliability and prolong the effective life of infrastructure assets
The power utility supplies high grade water for their own internal processes as well other industrial customers. Tuas Power was experiencing leaks within their distribution network, which were unexpected because these pipelines were less than five years old, made of steel, and laid above ground.
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U.S. Steel Gary Works Needed to Generate Less Dewatering Waste
The steel industry is more often requiring recycling of waste products, due to costs and compliance. With a dewatering system from Evoqua, this steel company found the solution they were looking for. With the high cost of handling, disposal and transportation of steel mill sludges, there is an increasing demand in the steel industry for waste products that can be recycled or landfilled without further processing.
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Goulds Water Technology rainwater for today’s high water demand households
In the remote dry Southwest, where water scarcity and escalating demand are daily issues faced by homeowners, third generation Goulds Water Technology professional Kevin Cunningham is finding new uses for Goulds Water Technology variable speed and constant pressure systems.
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Levi’s® Stadium: Setting a new standard for conserving natural resources with Bell & Gossett
With a 27,000-square-foot green roof, owners’ suites decked out in reclaimed wood, and farm-to-table concession offerings, the 68,500-seat stadium includes a wide variety of “green” features. But none of these is more crucial to its operations than the use of recycled water for its flushing and irrigation systems, which account for 85 percent of the facility’s water usage.
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L.A.’s Wilshire Grand Center stands tall with Bell & Gossett and A-C Fire
The Hotel Statler, later known as the Wilshire Grand, would become an L.A. cultural icon, hosting celebrities, politicians and businesspeople the world over. Yet, over time, its heating and cooling systems became so inefficient that not even a $20 million makeover could save the aging hotel, setting in motion the five-year construction of a new hotel, offices and retail space.
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