Brunot Island

Brunot Island (also spelled Brunot's Island) is a 129-acre (52 ha) island in the Ohio River. It is officially part of the Marshall-Shadeland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania in the United States. It was named for Dr. Felix Brunot who settled the island with his extended family in the late 1700s.[1] The family entertained the Lewis and Clark expedition on the island in August 1803. The island is home to the Brunot Island Generating Station, a 315 MW fossil fuel power plant.

A view of Brunot Island from Mount Washington

The Ohio Connecting Railroad Bridge crosses the Ohio River at the island. The island does not otherwise connect to the land, and all vehicular traffic must use a ferry to access the island. The employees of the power plant use a pedestrian walkway on the railroad bridge to go to work. The walkway is not accessible to the public.

From 1903 to 1914, the island was the home of Brunots Island Race Track.

Brunot Island Generating Station

A view of Brunot Island as seen from River Avenue in McKees Rocks
  • Type: Fossil fuel; oil and natural gas
  • Net capacity: 315 MW (megawatts)
  • Began operation: 1972
  • Current owner: NRG Energy

Plants

  • Three oil-fired simple cycle peaking power plants
    • Total generating capacity: 53 MW
  • One natural-gas-fired combined cycle power plant
    • Total generating capacity: 262 MW
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gollark: 1. Is that seriously how you read what I was saying? I was saying: fix our minds' weird ingroup/outgroup division.2. That is very vague and does not sound like it could actually work.
gollark: I'm pretty sure we *have* done the ingroup/outgroup thing for... forever. And... probably the solutions are something like transhumanist mind editing, or some bizarre exotic social thing I can't figure out yet.
gollark: I mean that humans are bad in that we randomly divide ourselves into groups then fiercely define ourselves by them, exhibit a crazy amount of exciting different types of flawed reasoning for no good reason, get caught up in complex social signalling games, come up with conclusions then rationalize our way to a vaguely sensible-looking justification, sometimes seemingly refuse to be capable of abstract thought when it's politically convenient, that sort of thing.
gollark: No, I think there are significant improvements possible. But different ones.

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-13. Retrieved 2014-05-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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