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District Cooling Plant #3
District Cooling for Downtown Austin

What is District Cooling?
A district cooling system provides an efficient and environmentally-friendly way to cool multiple buildings. District cooling systems are common in major cities in this country and throughout the world, particularly in cities that boast a dense urban core.
District Cooling Plant #3 in Downtown Austin
As Austin’s downtown continues to grow, Austin Energy is working to increase the number of downtown buildings that can use chilled water for their air conditioning systems.
Austin Energy has begun construction on a new district cooling plant at 812 West 2nd Street (also known as Electric Drive) adjacent to the Gables Park Tower and the future Bowie Underpass in Austin’s Downtown Seaholm EcoDistrict. The project makes use of a small, infill parcel that is considered undevelopable for other uses, and creates a municipal purpose that serves the public downtown.
- Download a map of current Central Business District Cooling Plants (pdf)
- View the District Cooling Plant 3 Site Plan (pdf)
- View the Art in Public Places upcoming project, Cloud Pavilion, planned for the DCP3 site
The downtown District Cooling Plant #3 (DCP3) will provide an additional 10,000 tons of cooling capacity utilizing 4-2,500 ton water cooled centrifugal chillers and nine cooling tower cells. This third downtown plant will allow Austin Energy to expand chilled water services to Austin’s burgeoning downtown development and increase the efficiency, redundancy, and reliability of the overall system.
- Learn more about the Seaholm Eco-District
- Find out more about the City of Austin Bowie Underpass project
Project Timeline
- June 2012 – Austin City Council amended Seaholm Master Development agreement and directs that property be used for chilled water infrastructure.
- January 2014 – Austin City Council rezoned property to P (Public), the designation for a governmental, civic, public purpose, or public institution use.
- June 2015 – Austin City Council approved design/engineering consultant contract for project.
- May 2017 – Austin City Council approved agreement with artist Beili Liu to design Art in Public Places artwork for project.
- Spring 2018 – Austin City Council approved construction contract.
- Summer 2018 – Construction began on District Cooling Plant #3.
- Summer 2020 – Art in Public Places and artist Beili Liu will install Cloud Pavilion on the south end of the site facing Electric Drive.
- Fall 2020 – District Cooling Plant #3 will be operational.
Learn More
- Watch the March 2018 presentation to the Austin Energy Utility Oversight Committee
- Review the November 2017 presentation to the Austin Downtown Commission
- Watch the November 2017 presentation to the Austin Design Commission
- Read the June 21, 2017 presentation to the Downtown Austin Neighborhood Association (pdf)
- Review the November 2016 presentation to the Austin Downtown Commission
- Watch the April 2016 presentation to the Austin Design Commission
Contact Us
- Email: District Energy
- Phone: 512-322-6302
Follow Us
- Facebook: /austinenergy
- Twitter: @austinenergy
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