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A museum runs climate control all night to protect things that can never be replaced.

C&I StorageHospitality & Leisure
A museum runs climate control all night to protect things that can never be replaced.

Museums and archives hold precise temperature and humidity around the clock to preserve collections. A power gap risks irreplaceable works, and a battery fire near them is unthinkable.

Conservation never sleeps

A museum, gallery or archive is a climate-control operation wrapped around a collection. Paintings, textiles, film and paper need temperature and humidity held inside tight bands continuously; drift for a few hours and the damage can be permanent and uninsurable.

The systems that hold those conditions run day and night, making energy one of the building's largest costs, and most institutions run on public funding where every euro of overhead competes with the work itself. Standby protection is essential, but a conventional battery room raises a hard question: what fire risk is acceptable next to objects that cannot be replaced.

Steady power, no fire trade-off

On-site storage holds critical climate and security systems through the gap between a mains failure and a generator start, so conditions never drift during a switchover. Day to day, it shifts heating and cooling load away from peak tariff hours and stores rooftop solar, trimming the overhead that competes with curatorial budgets.

Why 247 Energy

247 Energy supercapacitor systems carry zero thermal runaway risk and contain no flammable electrolyte, so they install inside a heritage building without the fire suppression and isolation a lithium room demands. They run quietly at 55 dB(A) and add no heat to a store or basement. The 247 ERP manager keeps conservation and security loads protected first.