Green history is being made on Long Wharf.
The Pirelli building, completed in 1969 as the headquarters of the Armstrong Rubber Co., will reemerge in the coming months as the Hotel Marcel, a boutique hotel in the Hilton hospitality family. (It’s named after Marcel Breuer, the principal architect on the original building. Italy’s Pirelli later bought Armstrong.)
Becker provided a guided tour of the construction project (see video) just as hundreds of solar energy panels were lifted and installed on the roof.
Becker said the Marcel will be the first net-zero carbon hotel in the United States. Net-zero means it doesn’t use fossil fuels for energy. It produces all the power it needs for lighting, heating, cooling, cooking, washing, and charging electric vehicles via 1,072 solar panels mounted on the roof and on parking canopies.
The building is an example of a global shift to all-electric living — a goal advocated locally by the environmental group New Haven Climate Movement. The group has been pushing for the city to shift to electric vehicles, to convert all city-owned buildings to electric heating and cooling, and to urge developers to turn their backs on fossil fuels, and is applauding an electrification resolution recently passed by the Board of Alders.
“This project is a great example of what an electric future could look like,” says Chris Schweitzer, a spokesperson for the group. “It’s really looking to reduce air pollution and other types of climate damage, and produce a much healthier future for New Haven and the world.”