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This is such a foreign concept for me in Murica. But I read a lot of alternative energy articles talking about stuff like heating sand and bricks and stuff that can then be used to heat local communities. Is this a common thing? Do they charge for it? Details, please.

This is such a foreign concept for me in Murica. But I read a lot of alternative energy articles talking about stuff like heating sand and bricks and stuff that can then be used to heat local communities. Is this a common thing? Do they charge for it? Details, please.

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[–] 3 pts

Can you name a locality in America that uses one? I'm genuinely curious

[–] 3 pts

Have you ever seen a hobo sleeping on a steaming vent grate in the winter? That city has a steam plant.

They're all over the place, especially on the East Coast.

Anytime you watch an horror movie and they are fighting in a back alley, and you wonder why it is so randomly steamy all over the place, it isn't because the SFX just wanted to use his fog machine, they are trying to emulate what a lot of cities with steam plants look like during the winter.

[–] 2 pts

I lived on Long Island for 3 years, and everyone used oil to heat their place. That's why I was confused. Most of my life has been spent on the west coast though, I will confess, so that's probably why it's such a foreign concept to me

[–] 2 pts

steam heat, in the US at least is mostly for large commercial buildings. Residential properties tend to use oil in the NE, Electric most everywhere, and Propane in some parts of the country.

[–] 2 pts

They aren't really used for residential heating to my knowledge, with the exception of some larger apartment buildings.

But surely you have seen something like in the winter?

[–] 3 pts (edited )

Both NYC and Chicago use centrally metered steam heat - Chicongo uses it for residential blocks as well as commercial. Boston, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Denver, etc...

See http://waterworkshistory.us/DH/DHlist.htm

This doesn't count some co-gen or local central steam like you find on large college or medical campuses. Granted, a lot of city steam has shut down, but there are still plenty left.

[–] 1 pt

Baltimore, Philidelphia, and DC all use steam heat in high rise buildings downtown to some extent.