Raphael's Rooms
Project description
Background
Adorned with frescoes painted between 1508 and 1524 by Renaissance artist Raphael and his workshop, the Raphael's Rooms are universally known as one of the greatest works of art ever created. The area was originally part of a suite of apartments for Pope Julius II, who commissioned the work. Today, Raphael’s Rooms are a part of the Vatican Museums at Vatican City, welcoming more than 30,000 visitors a day during high season, which runs from March through October.
- Respect the site’s architecture
- Design high efficiency system
- Optimize air circulation and air diffusion
- Maintain visitor access during installation
- Fan coils 10 kW capacity
- AquaSnap 30RQV chillers
- iVu® building automation system
Over a three-year period, Carrier engineers worked closely with the Vatican’s technical teams to develop a custom solution.
Invisibility and power density
The teams created an entirely new fan coil and casing design that packed 10kW of cooling capacity into the footprint of a 2.5kW unit. These new coils were installed underneath the windows in the Raphael's Rooms using pre-existing settings, remaining invisible to visitors.
Innovation
The Raphael's Rooms solution also included 8 AquaSnap 30RQV chillers installed in a location that remained unnoticeable to visitors. Carrier’s iVu® building automation system provides full visibility and control of the solution, and features custom algorithms developed by Automated Logic.