Showing posts with label home performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home performance. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Home Energy Savings and Health

By Douglas Poole

As I go about my work of providing home energy assessments and retrofits here in the
islands, I frequently come across clients that are concerned with houses that are “too
tight”. Building techniques over the past 20 years have certainly changed, and the fear
of an inadequately ventilated home is valid. It can also be misunderstood by many
homeowners… so let’s do a little myth-busting.

Houses need to breath, and so do you! Home energy savings and healthy indoor air
quality can easily coexist, as long as we strike a controlled balance between the two.
Todd Kegerreis of Sage Building Solutions prepares for a Blower Door test.

Indoor air quality greatly affects our health. Carpets, pets, mold, soil gasses, wood
stoves and propane appliances can all contaminate the air. Unfortunately, many homes
rely on building deficiencies to exchange the air: gaps around plumbing and electrical
penetrations, inadequate seals around windows, holes in heating systems, and the
unsealed spaces around vents and outlets. Not only are these deficiencies erratic, they
also exchange the indoor air with air from potentially contaminated areas like your attic
or crawl space. I would personally rather avoid breathing the same air as the critters and
contaminants that inhabit those spaces.

We clean the air by exchanging indoor air with fresh air from outside. According
to the really smart folks at the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-
Conditioning Engineers, a good target for air-change is .35 times per hour (ACH). This
gives occupants enough air to breath, and yet retains valuable heating energy.

If your house is full of holes then you are losing energy through the roof system
(exfiltration) and introducing drafts and crawl-space air into your home (infiltration). In
the leaky house, warm, moist air that is leaving through the ceiling can also create mold
and rot problems in roof and attic systems. The energy efficient home creates an airtight
barrier to separate you from the elements. When the air inside your home stays inside
your home, your home uses less energy. “But what about fresh air” asks the proponent of
a not-so-tight house?

Rather than relying on Mother Nature, the healthy home uses mechanical ventilation
to provide fresh air. A bathroom or laundry exhaust fan on a timer will consistently
and reliably exchange your air. “That is why I open a window” you might say? That’s
fine, just know that you are no longer controlling the air exchange, Mother Nature is.
A healthy home ensures air exchange through mechanization, which is much more
consistent than our fickle human nature and the irregular whims of wind. Luckily, the
new exhaust fans are nearly silent and can be run on timers. You won’t have to think
about it or listen to it.

If you want to get really fancy, you can install a Heat Recovery Ventilator. This fan will
send out stale air and pull in fresh air through a ducted system, while retaining much of
the heat. These units are a great option if you want a really tight or super efficient house.

To determine the required run-time for the fan to reach a .35 ACH rate, we start, and end,
with a diagnostic test called a Blower Door. This determines the exact tightness of the
house. We then let the Blower Door guide us in air-sealing the home. When combustion
appliances like gas water heaters and woodstoves are present, it is important to run
combustion safety tests as well. These appliances can limit how tight the house can be
before problems will arise.

In the Home Performance industry we have a saying, “Build tight and ventilate right.”
We have to take the guesswork out of your home’s performance if you want to live in a
home that balances energy efficiency with health. Hopefully we have sufficiently eroded
the myth of the too-tight house and offered inspiration for you to create a meticulously
sealed, mechanically ventilated home. A healthy home… and an energy efficient home!

Please give a call (298-1313) or email with questions or comments. Building science is complex and I always enjoy a lively discussion!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Home Performance

Home.  It’s a word heavy with connotation, a word containing a world of personal significance.  A home should be a place of comfort and a source of strength, rejuvenation and health.  While most of us have a strong emotional connection to our homes, we usually don’t consider the scientific system designed for our comfort. When a Home Performance evaluation is used for your home, the rigors of science optimize your home’s performance.

A high-performance sports car holds the road so well  because the weight to power ratio of the car, coupled with precision engineering, gives it stability. The secret lies in the system.  Home Performance focusses on your house as a “system” with the goal of supporting a more comfortable, healthy, durable and energy-efficient home.  Working with the laws of physics and the dynamics of heat, air and moisture movement, the system is balanced and finely tuned, like a sports-car, and the structure performs optimally.

While many homes are pleasing to the eye, they often neglect a whole world of comfort potential. Pack away the visual insistence of your eyes and consider your home from the reach of your other senses, the often neglected realm of smell, touch and feel.  Take a deep breath.  Does your house smell musty or stale?  Do you battle to keep your home warm in the winter?  Do you suffer the insult of cold feet from frigid floors?  A home should be free of drafts, easy on the heat and contain fresh air to breathe.  This will maximize your home’s potential.

The Home Performance process begins with an Energy Audit and utilizes diagnostic tools such as a blower door, infrared camera, gas sniffers and pressure gauges to test the home’s performance.  There is no guesswork. Home Performance makes sick houses healthy by ensuring an optimal flow of air.

After Home Performance testing the auditor will build a list of concerns to be addressed and prescribe the solutions.  Some of the common problems found in older homes are inadequate insulation values, far too many air leaks, single pane windows and propane appliances with flue gas concerns.  Newer housing stock may be without proper ventilation and suffer from poor indoor air quality; mold and mildew are concerns along with broken thermal boundaries.

Energy remodel measures offer exceptional returns on investment. The savings are quantifiable and paybacks arrive within a few years.  You will immediately notice a difference in your home following performance measures.  Your home shouldn’t be a place of cold feet.  It shouldn’t be a battle ground against the elements.  It should be a place for you to be comfortable and healthy.

After more than 20 years in the building industry, I have found Home Performance to offer the most bang for the buck in reducing heating and energy costs.  Full energy remodels generally range from $2,000-$9,000, depending on the depth of the measures.  There are several rebates and incentives offered by OPALCO and the federal government to assist in the weatherization costs.  Some of these expire at the new year, so now is a good time to sign on for for an energy remodel and start living in a more comfortable, healthy and energy-efficient home.

Email Energy Matters at islandenergymatters@googlegroups.com, call me at 468-4047, or call OPALCO at 376-3586 to sign-up for a Home Energy Snapshot that includes an in-depth home energy assessment for $25.  The Snapshot does not offer diagnostic testing, but it does include high efficiency specialty light bulbs and shower heads.


(Written by Doug Poole, this article was first published in the Islands Weekly in November 2010.)