View allAll Photos Tagged Consolidated-Edison
Zeckendorf Towers (1987) - David, Brody & Associates - Postmodern
Consolidated Edison Building (1928) - Warren and Wetmore/Henry Hardenbergh - Neoclassical
The Consolidated Edison power plant located along the East River in Manhattan (between 15th & 16th Streets)
CERAWK01231-07MAR2013-OV-FONG.JPG - Transmission and Distribution: Transforming the Power Grid
The US fiscal stimulus tried to accelerate the introduction of technology to make the grid smarter. Federal policies are pushing to adapt the grid to integrate larger amounts of intermittent and remote power generation. What are the lessons and implications of the past few years and how are people incorporating them into today’s strategies? Federal policy continues to evolve to address cost allocation and investment incentives; meanwhile, recent events have highlighted the risks and threats of natural disasters as well as cyber threats to perhaps the most critical infrastructure in the US economy. What are the opportunities for investment, performance and security of the grid?
Margarett Jolly, DG Ombudsperson, Consolidated Edison Company of New YorkJim Robb, Senior Vice President, Strategic Planning and Environmental Affairs, Northeast UtilitiesGregory Thurnher, Supervisor, Transmission Strategy, Energy Reliability Council of TexasMichael Valocchi, VP/Partner, Global Energy and Utilities Industry Leader, IBMMark Griffith (Chair), Senior Research Director, Gas, Power and Renewables - Americas, IHS
CERAWeek 2013, 32nd Executive Conference at the Hilton Americas-Houston, Texas - on Thursday, March 7, 2013. Photo by Gary Fong/Genesis Photos
Consolidated Edison Company headquarters (SOM, 1972). Flatbush Avenue between Nevins and Livingstone - formerly the site of the Fox Theater, demolished in the late 1960s.
A group of #ClimateStrike activists dropped a banner over the entrance to the Consolidated Edison Headquarters in downtown Manhattan on September 24, 2019, with the message "Con Ed's Rate Hike Plan Fails the Climate Test. #Climate Strike Utilities". This is one act in a growing movement directed at corporate utilities that are abusing their monopoly status to raise already exorbitant rates, and use that money to fund massive expansions of fracked gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas storage tanks, and other fracked gas support infrastructure throughout New York City and New York State. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
View from Union Square towards midtown. Consolidated Edison power company is using this as their staging area.
Handheld at 25600 ISO using built in camera HDR
CERAWK01246-07MAR2013-OV-FONG.JPG - Transmission and Distribution: Transforming the Power Grid
The US fiscal stimulus tried to accelerate the introduction of technology to make the grid smarter. Federal policies are pushing to adapt the grid to integrate larger amounts of intermittent and remote power generation. What are the lessons and implications of the past few years and how are people incorporating them into today’s strategies? Federal policy continues to evolve to address cost allocation and investment incentives; meanwhile, recent events have highlighted the risks and threats of natural disasters as well as cyber threats to perhaps the most critical infrastructure in the US economy. What are the opportunities for investment, performance and security of the grid?
Margarett Jolly, DG Ombudsperson, Consolidated Edison Company of New YorkJim Robb, Senior Vice President, Strategic Planning and Environmental Affairs, Northeast UtilitiesGregory Thurnher, Supervisor, Transmission Strategy, Energy Reliability Council of TexasMichael Valocchi, VP/Partner, Global Energy and Utilities Industry Leader, IBMMark Griffith (Chair), Senior Research Director, Gas, Power and Renewables - Americas, IHS
CERAWeek 2013, 32nd Executive Conference at the Hilton Americas-Houston, Texas - on Thursday, March 7, 2013. Photo by Gary Fong/Genesis Photos
25 Oct 2001
Consolidated Edison, Con Ed to its friends.
This manhole was about twice the size of the ones in the UK.
Looking across the East River to Manhattan.
That's the 14th Street Consolidated Edison plant in the background.
ca. 1999-2000
A group of #ClimateStrike activists dropped a banner over the entrance to the Consolidated Edison Headquarters in downtown Manhattan on September 24, 2019, with the message "Con Ed's Rate Hike Plan Fails the Climate Test. #Climate Strike Utilities". This is one act in a growing movement directed at corporate utilities that are abusing their monopoly status to raise already exorbitant rates, and use that money to fund massive expansions of fracked gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas storage tanks, and other fracked gas support infrastructure throughout New York City and New York State. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
The plant produces the steam that heats many of the older buildings in midtown, including the Empire State Building.
A vehicle is submerged on 14th Street near the Consolidated Edison power plant, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in New York. Sandy knocked out power to at least 3.1 million people, and New York's main utility said large sections of Manhattan had been plunged into darkness by the storm, with 250,000 customers without power as water pressed into the island from three sides, flooding rail yards, subway tracks, tunnels and roads. (AP Photo/ John Minchillo)
A group of #ClimateStrike activists dropped a banner over the entrance to the Consolidated Edison Headquarters in downtown Manhattan on September 24, 2019, with the message "Con Ed's Rate Hike Plan Fails the Climate Test. #Climate Strike Utilities". This is one act in a growing movement directed at corporate utilities that are abusing their monopoly status to raise already exorbitant rates, and use that money to fund massive expansions of fracked gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas storage tanks, and other fracked gas support infrastructure throughout New York City and New York State. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
A group of #ClimateStrike activists dropped a banner over the entrance to the Consolidated Edison Headquarters in downtown Manhattan on September 24, 2019, with the message "Con Ed's Rate Hike Plan Fails the Climate Test. #Climate Strike Utilities". This is one act in a growing movement directed at corporate utilities that are abusing their monopoly status to raise already exorbitant rates, and use that money to fund massive expansions of fracked gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas storage tanks, and other fracked gas support infrastructure throughout New York City and New York State. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
Built in 1907, this Classical Revival-style building was designed by Daniel H. Burnham and Company to house the Commercial National Bank, and was later known as the Edison Building, though today it has become known as The National. The building’s original tenant, the Commercial National Bank, merged with Continental National Bank in 1910, and moved to the Continental and Commercial National Bank Building nearby in 1914. Around this time, the building became known as the Edison Building, and served as the headquarters of Consolidated Edison until 1969. The building stands 20 stories and 374 feet (114 meters) tall, with a U-shaped tower above four-story a rectilinear base that takes up the entire site, with the light well in the center of the U-shaped tower opening into the interior of the block to the east, creating a fully enclosed outdoor space it shares with the adjacent Marquette Building. The building is clad in terra cotta with stone cladding at the base, and features one-over-one double-hung windows in groups of three, with two-story arched bays on the nineteenth and twentieth floors flanked by decorative relief panels, decorative sculptural relief panels between the eighteenth floor windows, cornices at the top of the building ringing the parapet that encloses the low-slope roof, at the base of the nineteenth floor, and at the top of the fourth floor, with the lower cornices featuring more intricate details. The second, third, and fourth floors feature multi-story engaged fluted Corinthian columns and pilasters, multi-story windows on the second and third floor floors, and decorative reliefs on the spandrels between the third and fourth floors. The building today is the oldest remaining building designed by Daniel H. Burham in the Chicago Loop, and was designated as a Chicago Landmark in 2016. The building presently houses office space on the upper floors and a large food hall on the lower floors.
A group of #ClimateStrike activists dropped a banner over the entrance to the Consolidated Edison Headquarters in downtown Manhattan on September 24, 2019, with the message "Con Ed's Rate Hike Plan Fails the Climate Test. #Climate Strike Utilities". This is one act in a growing movement directed at corporate utilities that are abusing their monopoly status to raise already exorbitant rates, and use that money to fund massive expansions of fracked gas pipelines, liquefied natural gas storage tanks, and other fracked gas support infrastructure throughout New York City and New York State. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
On January 16, 2020, the biggest public turnout of New York advocates, businesses, families, farmers, students, health professionals, and more, attended the Public Service Commission’s (PSC) monthly meeting and stood up in outrage as they awarded Consolidated Edison almost a billion dollars per year for their upcoming rate cycle, funded by New York residents, to construct 3 new fracked gas pipelines in Westchester/Bronx, Queens and Manhattan and replace old pipeline with new pipeline. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
Conference on Electrical Simulation?, Washington DC; Andrew Gemant (right); clockwise starting left of Gemant: Thomas, Consolidated Edison; Del Mar, Holinshaw; Von Hippel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Zimmerman, Cornell; ?, Corning Glass; Gooding, Okonite; Murphy, Bell Telephone, October 1948
H. T. Garrett, Photographer, courtesy AIP Emilio Segre Visual Archives, Gemant Collection
To see more photos, go to photos.aip.org/
On January 16, 2020, the biggest public turnout of New York advocates, businesses, families, farmers, students, health professionals, and more, attended the Public Service Commission’s (PSC) monthly meeting and stood up in outrage as they awarded Consolidated Edison almost a billion dollars per year for their upcoming rate cycle, funded by New York residents, to construct 3 new fracked gas pipelines in Westchester/Bronx, Queens and Manhattan and replace old pipeline with new pipeline. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
On January 16, 2020, the biggest public turnout of New York advocates, businesses, families, farmers, students, health professionals, and more, attended the Public Service Commission’s (PSC) monthly meeting and stood up in outrage as they awarded Consolidated Edison almost a billion dollars per year for their upcoming rate cycle, funded by New York residents, to construct 3 new fracked gas pipelines in Westchester/Bronx, Queens and Manhattan and replace old pipeline with new pipeline. (Photo by Erik McGregor)