ROME(AP)
Some Holy See buildings will start using solar energy,
reflecting Pope Benedict XVI's concern about conserving the
Earth's resources, a Vatican engineer said Tuesday. The roof of
the Paul VI auditorium will be redone next year, with its cement
panels replaced with photovoltaic cells to convert sunlight into
electricity, engineer Pier Carlo Cuscianna said.
The 6,300-seat auditorium is used for the pontiff's general
audiences on Wednesdays in winter and in bad weather during the
rest of the year. Concerts in honor of pontiffs are also staged in
the hall, with its sweeping stage.
The cells will produce enough electricity to illuminate, heat or
cool the building, Cuscianna said.
"Since the auditorium isn't used every day, the
(excess) energy will feed into the network providing (the Vatican)
with power, so other Vatican offices can use the energy," he
said.
A feasibility study for the planned conversion, published
recently in the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, found
it made economic sense. It quoted from Benedict's speeches
defending the environment and noted that his predecessor, the late
John Paul II, also championed the safeguarding of natural
resources.
Cuscianna recalled a speech in which Benedict lamented "the
unbalanced use of energy" in the world.
Last summer, Benedict called on Christians to unite to take
"care of creation without squandering its resources and
sharing them in a convivial manner." He said lifestyle choices
were damaging the environment and making "the lives of poor
people on Earth especially unbearable."
The modernistic hall, at the southern end of Vatican City, was
built in 1969, designed by architect Pier Luigi Nervi.
The auditorium "was born half-ecological," Cuscianna
said, noting that Nervi used cement panels on its 6,000-square-yard
flattened vaulted roof in part to help keep pilgrims cool.
The new roof panels will be the same shape and almost the same
color as the cement panels they are replacing, minimizing the
aesthetic impact, Cuscianna said.
Weathering has deteriorated the condition of the cement panels,
which needed replacement, so Cuscianna thought it was the right
time to make the move to solar in Mediterranean Italy, which enjoys
many sunny days.
The Vatican is considering the installation of photovoltaic
cells on roofs of other Holy See buildings, although centuries-old
landmarks like St. Peter's Basilica won't be touched.
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