Velo badge image

STAY UP TO DATE WITH VELO NEWS

Sign up to receive updates on Mill District Velo events.

 
 
 
 

Login

Login to the Owner's portal to view updated information.

If you need to reset your password please contact us via sales@milldistricthealdsburg.com or 707.314.0094 and we will help you out.

If you are interested in a Mill District residence and don’t have an account, please contact us at 707.314.0094 or sales@milldistricthealdsburg.com.

Inquire today
Back to Issues Back to Articles

Issue No. 18 | February 2021

FEATURE

Keeping Healdsburg Green

For a relatively rural town of roughly 12,000 people, Healdsburg certainly is embracing sustainability in a big way. Since early 2019, a significant chunk of the city’s power has been clean, green, and 100 percent renewable, with the bulk of it coming in the form of geothermal energy from The Geysers on the Sonoma/Lake county border north of town.

The latest example of this commitment: A new floating array of solar panels, which city officials say is the largest installation of its kind in the country. The panels, which sit on top of the water reclamation facility south of town, will provide up to 8 percent of the city’s annual power needs. According to Utility Director Terry Crowley, the array also helps reduce algae growth in the reclamation ponds below. As Crowley, explains, energy from the array will provide every resident with a cleaner energy source and reduce overall greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

“Right now, the city meets customer energy needs with roughly 40 percent renewable energy and this project will increase that number to 48 percent and lower Healdsburg’s overall carbon footprint,” Crowley said in an interview earlier this month. “One of the city’s hopes is that this project helps lead the way for larger installations throughout northern California.” Crowley added that the second-largest floating solar array is currently in Sayreville, New Jersey.

Here in Healdsburg, city officials say the impetus for the most recent sustainability initiative is SB 100, the state mandate to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to have 100 percent fossil fuel-free electricity by 2045. Crowley says he expects Healdsburg to reach the milestone much sooner. What does all this mean for residents? It means that by living here, we’re combatting climate change. “This project is just one example of how the City is increasing the level of renewable energy and lowering GHG emissions,” Crowley says. At Mill District, we certainly can get excited about that.

Note: The City of Healdsburg is giving a virtual update on the project over Facebook Live on February 24 at 1 p.m. Details on the event are still developing, but city officials say the brief update will include some live images from the site, as well as a full explanation of how the panels will contribute to the city’s push toward renewable energy. For more details, click here.

Also in this Issue

CONSTRUCTION UPDATE All About Sustainability

At Mill District, sustainability is central to everything we do. It drives us to be smart about the way we approach our project. It reminds us to take only what we must as we develop our corner of Wine Country. It encourages us to minimize our impact on the City of Healdsburg as a whole. Managing Director David Hill calls sustainability our “guiding light,” and that metaphor seems apt. All told, there are five components of our commitment to sustainability.

Read More

WHAT'S HAPPENING February Fun

So what if February is the shortest month of the year? This year, the month is chock full of fun and meaningful things to do—both in and around Healdsburg and in the county at large.

Read More

SPOTLIGHT Holly Hoods

Meet executive director of the Healdsburg Museum & Historical Society. After 25 years working as a historian here, she has more of a commanding knowledge of the city’s past than just about anyone else.

Read More