Residential geothermal energy makes use of the constant, year-round temperature of the earth below the surface to efficiently provide both heating and cooling for a home. In the summer, the cool earth beneath a house sits at about 55 degrees and can be tapped into with a heat pump to provide cooling. In the winter, that 55-degree underground expanse provides a much warmer source of air to heat instead of the often freezing-cold air outside. Geothermal systems are appealing because they use far less energy than other sources of heating and cooling.
Using geothermal energy to heat and cool buildings is nothing new. But after years of planning and months of drilling into the ground, the first neighborhood-scale geothermal heating and cooling project has come online in Framingham, Massachusetts.
The project ties together 31 residential and five commercial buildings that share the underground infrastructure needed to heat and cool them. This sort of shared geothermal system has previously been used on college campuses and similar places, but never before across a neighborhood in the United States.
The $14 million project, built by Eversource, broke ground in June 2023, and comprises 90 boreholes or wells drilled 600-700 feet underground. Approximately 135 customers are connected to the system, including low- and moderate-income customers, apartment buildings, a gas station, and a kitchen cabinet showroom.
A total of 13 states, including Massachusetts and New York, are considering pilot projects or advancing legislation that would allow gas utilities to develop networked geothermal heating and cooling.
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First-in-the-Nation Geothermal Heating and Cooling System Comes to Massachusetts
Photo, posted September 30, 2019, courtesy of Stephen D. Strowes via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio
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