thank u provided this pic and can you provide more information for me ? plz
And... how you can understand my poor English...?
It is just an architectural design to be pleasing to the eye rather than an ugly H Frame or pole of an eye sore.
As for your English I just have to guess. I understand the frustration as I just moved to Panama and my Spanish is not great. Tengo mucho trabajo que hacer
Yea, from the sign it looks like another thoughtful, cost effective use of Texas financial resources used for the medical profession.
It is a bank. It just happens to be sitting on a corner to the entrance street of a hospital in Denison TX. All of it paid for by the bank. FWIW the bank is called Landmark Bank of TX.
It is a bank. It just happens to be sitting on a corner to the entrance street of a hospital in Denison TX. All of it paid for by the bank. FWIW the bank is called Landmark Bank of TX.
How about the shade issue? The big sign on top and some panels on top of others?
I am sure that the placement was checked to insure that there would not be shade issues (during prime solar hours at a minimum.)
A lot of the "green" equipment on poles that you see in some cities does not appear to have had the same level of design oversight.
I am sure that the placement was checked to insure that there would not be shade issues (during prime solar hours at a minimum.)
A lot of the "green" equipment on poles that you see in some cities does not appear to have had the same level of design oversight.
Well yes and no. Where you see the sign was suppose to be another Branch of panels. However banks being what they are, a business. want a nice big brightly lit sign and demanded a sign as a after thought. They were fully aware it would cast shade on the panels after 2ish PM. Like most businesses, th econservation efforts are mostly just public relation statements and they could care less if it works or not.
Walmart is the smartest best managed business model I know of. I have done two Walmart's in TX with Solar PV, and know Walmart intends to do several more around the country. The two I was involved with are 400 and 500 KW respectively that generate roughly 2 to 3 Mwh/day or roughly 15% of their daily energy requirements for a store which saves them roughly $250/day in electric bills. The genius is it cost them nothing to install the system. All of it paid for with local tax and utility company dollars. You would be amazed how much of your tax dollars go into paying for a Walmart buildings.
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