Electricity

Harnessing gravity to turn supertall buildings into energy storage systems

energy vault som energy storage

Photo: Schmid-Reportagen from Pixabay

Published

June 11, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 11, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

After launching the commissioning of the world’s first gravity energy storage system, next to a wind farm near Shanghai, Energy Vault plans to deploy this innovative concept in supertall buildings around the world.

The new gravity energy storage systems are to be developed in partnership with Chicago-based architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), which plans to design buildings up to a kilometer tall.

The innovative solution applied by Energy Vault harnesses the Earth’s gravity and kinetic energy: excess renewable energy is used to lift massive composite blocks, and then, when needed, the blocks are dropped and their kinetic energy spins generators that produce electricity.

SOM designed the world’s tallest building, the 830-meter Burj Khalifa tower in Dubai.

Energy Vault has more gravity storage solutions

Under the contract with Energy Vault, SOM will be the exclusive designer for new Energy Vault gravity energy storage systems (GESS), incorporating the technology into high-rise buildings in urban areas and deployable structures in natural environments.

The cooperation has been going on for a year, including on four new Energy Vault GESS solutions. These solutions include the EVu system, a tower which enables the integration of a gravity system for energy storage in high-rise buildings through hollow structures over 300 meters and up to 1,000 meters high.

The storage capacity could reach several gigawatts, enabling it to power the building itself as well as nearby structures.

The facility in China could be online by the end of 2024

Other new solutions developed by Energy Vault are the EVc, a cylinder-shaped pumped hydro structure in tall buildings, the EVy, which is designed for existing slopes and terrain, and the EV0, which utilizes the benefits of pumped hydro storage but without building concrete structures and disturbing the environment.

The solution already implemented in China is called EVx, and Energy Vault and its partners Atlas Renewable and China Tianying have announced that they will connect the facility to the grid in the fourth quarter of this year.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Europe adds 19 1 GW wind power 2025 EU lags behind targets

Europe adds 19.1 GW of wind power in 2025 – EU lags behind targets

26 February 2026 - Germany accounted for 30% of European growth of 19.1 GW last year, according to WindEurope. Turkey remains dominant in the southeast.

drina buk bijela lake

Hydropower plants to transform upper Drina river into lake, say environmentalists

25 February 2026 - The planned hydropower plants on the upper course of the Drina will alter the ecosystem and local climate, the Center for Environment warned

croatia hadbooks licensing renewables hrote eihp

Croatia releases handbooks for permits for renewable energy investors

25 February 2026 - The Croatian Energy Market Operator (HROTE) and the Hrvoje Požar Energy Institute (EIHP) have issued two handbooks for investors

US LNG deals supply Central and Eastern Europe Balkans

US landing LNG deals to supply Central and Eastern Europe, Balkans

25 February 2026 - A group of European and Balkan countries agreed with the US to enhance gas supply, primarily by purchasing its LNG