The Benefits of Photovoltaic Garden Fountains

Beyond its visible charm, interior wall fountains can also serve to keep your house at a cool temperature. Employing the same methods used in air conditioners and evaporative coolers, they are a great alternative to cool off your home. You can also save on your electric costs because they consume less energy.
A fan can be used to blow fresh, dry air across them in order to produce a cooling effect. To improve air flow, turn on your ceiling fan or use the air from some corner of the area. It is essential to ensure that air is always moving over the surface of the water. It is the nature of fountains and waterfalls to generate cooled, fresh air. Merely standing in the vicinity of a large public fountain or waterfall will send a sudden chill through whoever is nearby. Be sure to situate your fountain cooling system where it will not be exposed to extra heat. Your fountain will be less reliable if you put it in the sunlight.
Original Water Delivery Techniques in Rome
Original Water Delivery Techniques in Rome With the building of the first elevated aqueduct in Rome, the Aqua Anio Vetus in 273 BC, individuals who lived on the city’s foothills no longer had to rely only on naturally-occurring spring water for their requirements. Outside of these aqueducts and springs, wells and rainwater-collecting cisterns were the only technologies available at the time to supply water to areas of higher elevation. From the beginning of the sixteenth century, water was routed to Pincian Hill by using the underground channel of Acqua Vergine. Pozzi, or manholes, were engineered at standard stretches along the aqueduct’s channel. The manholes made it easier to thoroughly clean the channel, but it was also possible to use buckets to pull water from the aqueduct, as we observed with Cardinal Marcello Crescenzi when he owned the property from 1543 to 1552, the year he died. He didn’t get enough water from the cistern that he had established on his property to collect rainwater. To provide himself with a more useful system to assemble water, he had one of the manholes opened, offering him access to the aqueduct below his property.Modern Garden Decor: Outdoor Fountains and their Beginnings

Originally, fountains only served a practical purpose. People in cities, towns and villages received their drinking water, as well as water to bathe and wash, via aqueducts or springs in the vicinity. Up to the late 19th century, water fountains had to be near an aqueduct or reservoir and higher than the fountain so that gravity could make the water move downwards or jet high into the air. Fountains were an excellent source of water, and also served to decorate living areas and memorialize the designer. The main materials used by the Romans to create their fountains were bronze or stone masks, mostly illustrating animals or heroes. During the Middle Ages, Muslim and Moorish garden designers included fountains in their designs to mimic the gardens of paradise. Fountains played a considerable role in the Gardens of Versailles, all part of French King Louis XIV’s desire to exert his power over nature. Seventeen and 18 century Popes sought to laud their positions by including decorative baroque-style fountains at the point where restored Roman aqueducts arrived into the city.
Indoor plumbing became the key source of water by the end of the 19th century thereby limiting urban fountains to mere decorative elements. The creation of unique water effects and the recycling of water were two things made possible by swapping gravity with mechanical pumps.
Nowadays, fountains decorate public spaces and are used to recognize individuals or events and fill recreational and entertainment needs.