International Association of Certified Home Inspectors
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| Exterior Contains discussions about the exterior portion of a home inspection. This includes roofs, gutters, downspouts, decks, patios, windows, et cetera. |
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A Bridge To Far
Article by BSI For a bunch of supposedly clever folks we sure do dumb things. One of the big ideas of the past couple of decades or so is to keep the heat out during cooling and keep the heat in during heating. The better we are at this the less energy we need to use to condition the interior. Apparently this concept has not caught on. How else do we explain modern construction that uses steel, concrete, aluminum and glass the way we do? For those who somehow missed high school physics, steel, concrete, aluminum and glass are all thermally conductive materials. Except for concrete, we make frying pans out of all of them. If an alien from another planet1 looked at our construction practices he would conclude that we have too much heat in buildings and we want to reject that heat to the outside.2 We expose our concrete slab edges and our concrete frames. We build our structures like heat exchangers with protruding fins that transfer every last available BTU across them—like huge concrete “Harleys” with air-cooled structural frames (Photograph 1, Photograph 2, Photograph 3). Photo 1: "Harley Davidson" Architecture—The projecting concrete slabs transfer heat across the enclosure. Photo 2: Architectural Statement—Apparently, the projecting slab is visually appealing (who knew?). It catches rain and transfers heat efficiently while wasting floor area (square footage). Photo 3: Exposed Frame—The bad news is that we have built lots of these. The good news is that they are easy to fix by recladding them with exterior insulation. This logic (actually “illogic”) starts with the field of the wall. Steel studs are designed to provide the maximum possible conductive energy transfer across a wall using the minimum amount of material – a thin web with cleverly designed heat transfer fins (flanges) on both sides to efficiently absorb heat on one side and reject it on the other (Figure 1). It gets even worse when steel studs are used with a steel frame (Photograph 4). It is pointless to insulate the cavity to fight this efficiency of heat transfer. Of course if it is pointless, we do it. The lunacy has progressed to the point where we are using higher and higher thermal resistance cavity insulations like expensive spray foams. Why waste money on cheap insulation when we can waste even more on expensive insulation? Figure 1: Efficient Heat Transfer—Steel studs are designed to provide the maximum possible conductive energy transfer across a wall using the minimum amount of material—a thin web with cleverly designed heat transfer fins (flanges) on both sides to efficiently absorb heat on one side and reject it on the other. Photo 4: Conductive Heaven—Not much to say here except “what were you possibly thinking?” It is a waste to insulate the cavities. Exterior insulation is the only rational option here. The only solution is to insulate on the outside of the steel studs, which is easy, elegant, effective and efficient. Leave the cavity empty—put the insulation on the outside (Photograph 5). Done. Except when we actually do this, we don’t get the credit for it we deserve. We actually get penalized code wise and cost wise. Put an R-19 batt in a steel stud wall and you are lucky to get R-5 to R-6 in the real world. That’s equal thermal resistance wise to about 1 inch of rigid insulation installed on the outside of the steel studs. With an R-19 batt you meet the “nominal” code requirement. Know what “nominal” means? It means “in name only.” It is not the true performance. In a perversion of thermodynamics, most codes require you to install 4 inches of rigid insulation on the outside of the steel studs—a “real” R-20 – to meet “equivalence” to the code stipulated “nominal” R-19. Photo 5: Exterior Insulation—The pink is the exterior insulation. The blue is the rain control layer (drainage plane) and the air control layer (air barrier) and the vapor control layer. The brown is the brick cladding. If life was fair, 1 inch of rigid insulation on the outside of a steel stud wall assembly would be equal to installing R-19 in the cavity. It is equal in the real world, but not in the code world.3 The point here is that you are throwing away 75 percent of your thermal resistance with these thermal bridges—and that is only in the field of the wall. It gets much worse elsewhere, as we will see. Other thermal bridges reduce overall R-value even more. Okay, the field of the wall is easy—exterior insulation. Now it gets ugly. How do you handle the frame? How about running the insulation past the frame as with the exterior insulation on the steel studs in the infill wall? Not so fast. How are you going to support the cladding with this exterior insulation between it and the structure? That masonry veneer that architects love and client’s want is typically supported on a relieving angle welded to plates cast into the concrete slab edge (Figure 2). Or even more thermally conductive, the relieving angle is attached directly to a steel frame. Figure 2:"Clint Eastwood" Thermodynamics—“The Good” uses offsets and exterior insulation. “The Bad” only uses exterior insulation. “The Ugly” uses neither. Running the exterior insulation over the upturned angle doesn’t get you much because the two dimensional heat transfer gets you bad (see heat rejection efficiency of steel studs earlier). You spend a lot more money on the steel angle. It now has to be wide enough to accommodate the thickness of the exterior insulation and thick enough to handle the moment loading.4 The thicker angle transfers the heat even faster, so you actually loose more than you gain. So if we spend lots of money and get little in return, at least we are consistent. We can fix this by standing the steel angle off the face of the frame with “off-sets.” Steel “C-sections,” tubes or knife-edges are attached intermittently to the structural frame to hold the steel angle away from the frame, allowing exterior insulation to run past the steel angle between it and the frame (Photograph 6). Now, you can use a small and standard-sized steel angle because the stand-offs do all of the work. They handle that “moment” thing that worries structural engineers. This approach has the added advantage of better accommodating dimensional variations in the slab edge and allows for better rainwater control (“drainage plane”) details. Photo 6a: Offset Relieving Angle—The angle iron support for the brick veneer is held away from the structural frame allowing exterior insulation to run by. Photo 6b: Offset Relieving Angle—The angle iron support for the brick veneer is held away from the structural frame allowing exterior insulation to run by. Okay, so that wasn’t so ugly. You want ugly, I’ll give you ugly: balconies. The typical balcony is a portion of the structural slab cantilevered past the structural frame projecting outward into the wild blue yonder —the ultimate thermal bridge (Photograph 7). The easy answer to this problem is getting rid of balconies. Unfortunately, as with most really bad ideas, they have this illogical appeal to the reptilian part of our brain.5 Why build them? They never get used. Do you ever see people on them aside from smokers? But I digress. We will have balconies despite all logic to the contrary. Photo 7: The Ultimate Thermal Bridge—A balcony is an efficient concrete-to-air heat exchanger that transfer every last available BTU across the structure. Consider “off-set” point supports rather than cantilevering the slab. This works well with an articulated façade (Photograph 8 and Photograph 9). The balcony can be a precast unit that is gapped from the wall allowing exterior insulation to run past the balcony between the balcony and the structural frame of the building. Photo 8: Balcony Offset Point Supports—Precast balcony supported intermittently to break thermal bridge. Photo 9: Mind the Gap—Close-up of precast balcony supported intermittently. Note the gap between the balcony and the structure allowing exterior insulation to run by. What if you don’t want an articulated façade? Use the “off-set” point supports described previously. But, now hang the balcony precast units with threaded rods tied back to the columns of the structural frame (Photograph 10). Neat, eh? Photo 10: Hang in There—Offset point supports combined with tie rods. How about a stand-alone supporting structure (Photograph 11)? Or half a stand-alone tied back to the structure at the top and resting at grade on it’s own pier (that way there is not thermal bridge at the foundation)? Finally, a really impressive innovation from our structural engineering colleagues—stainless steel rods welded to reinforcing bars cast into the structural slab. The rods pass through a foam block that acts as a thermal break. The rods are staggered up and down to handle both compression and tension loads (Photograph 12). Photo 11: Stand-Alone Balcony—Balconies have their own structural frame and foundation. Photo 12: Structural Innovation—Thermal break at slab-balcony connection. Stainless steel rods are welded to reinforcing bars cast into the structural slab. The rods pass through a foam block that acts as a thermal break. The rods are staggered up and down to handle both compression and tension loads. You can take this approach even farther with projecting structural members. Who says we have to live with those thermal bridges? You want to get serious about energy efficiency? Get serious about thermal bridges. That means exterior insulation on steel studs and structural frames, off-set relieving angles for brick veneers and some serious structural-thermal thinking for balconies and projecting structural members. We mechanical engineers are going to have to get to know those structural engineers better. And then we both have to have a chat with the architect. Some interesting times are coming . . . Hope some enjoy this type of Science. Marcel Cyr Home and Commercial Property Inspections IAC2 Certified NACHI04070211 http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards Commercial Builder CertainTeed Master Shingle Applicator Shingle Technology Ouellet Associaties Inc. http://www.oaconstruction.com/ |
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interesting stuff Marcel....
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#3
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Thanks Jim.
It is interesting for me to some point because I build similar Projects with the same Principal Designs Methods. Here is one from last Summer; ![]() As you can see, the cavity insulation is where the building is insulated. This was structural and metal stud backup with a brick facade. Notice here and in the article, the design of the relieving angle will not let the insulation to carry through, and it does in the article, or recommended. Glad you found interesting. It is all about energy, and energy comes in green. ha. ha. Marcel Cyr Home and Commercial Property Inspections IAC2 Certified NACHI04070211 http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards Commercial Builder CertainTeed Master Shingle Applicator Shingle Technology Ouellet Associaties Inc. http://www.oaconstruction.com/ |
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#4
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My commercial experience construction wise has always been as an interior finisher...they are way past the insulation stage before i ever entered the building....but it often crossed my mind the in-efficiencies in these steel glass and concrete mammoths
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#5
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Great article Marcel. Thanks.
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#6
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If only! Architects and designers need to get educated about this stuff or it'll never change!
-- Erby Crofutt B4U Close Home Inspections Georgetown, Kentucky KY Lic# HI-2041 www.b4uclose.com http://www.kentuckyradon.com Kentucky Home Inspections Kentucky Home Inspectors NACHI02090301 Read my Active Rain Blog here: Erby, The Central Kentucky Home Inspector Join Active Rain HERE and I'll get some points for your participation. Please! I did ask nice! |
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#7
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Great article Marcel, thank you.
A2Z Home Inspections Chris Duphily RR 1 Box 1107 Dingmans Ferry, PA 18328 Office: 570-371-6696 NACHI06092689 Proudly serving: Stroudsburg PA,Dingmans Ferry PA, Scranton PA and all of: Monroe,Pike,Wayne,lackawanna counties http://www.a2zpa.com http://www.a2zpainspections.com President - Pocono-Northeast PA Chapter of interNACHI |
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#8
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Thanks Chris, and I forgot to write in the Author and the system would not let me edit, so had to post it again.
__________________________________________________ _____________ A Bridge To Far Article by BSI written by Joseph Lstiburek of Building Science Corporation and posted on buildingscience.com. For a bunch of supposedly clever folks we sure do dumb things. One of the big ideas of the past couple of decades or so is to keep the heat out during cooling and keep the heat in during heating. The better we are at this the less energy we need to use to condition the interior. Apparently this concept has not caught on. How else do we explain modern construction that uses steel, concrete, aluminum and glass the way we do? For those who somehow missed high school physics, steel, concrete, aluminum and glass are all thermally conductive materials. Except for concrete, we make frying pans out of all of them. If an alien from another planet1 looked at our construction practices he would conclude that we have too much heat in buildings and we want to reject that heat to the outside.2 We expose our concrete slab edges and our concrete frames. We build our structures like heat exchangers with protruding fins that transfer every last available BTU across them—like huge concrete “Harleys” with air-cooled structural frames (Photograph 1, Photograph 2, Photograph 3). Photo 1: "Harley Davidson" Architecture—The projecting concrete slabs transfer heat across the enclosure. Photo 2: Architectural Statement—Apparently, the projecting slab is visually appealing (who knew?). It catches rain and transfers heat efficiently while wasting floor area (square footage). Photo 3: Exposed Frame—The bad news is that we have built lots of these. The good news is that they are easy to fix by recladding them with exterior insulation. This logic (actually “illogic”) starts with the field of the wall. Steel studs are designed to provide the maximum possible conductive energy transfer across a wall using the minimum amount of material – a thin web with cleverly designed heat transfer fins (flanges) on both sides to efficiently absorb heat on one side and reject it on the other (Figure 1). It gets even worse when steel studs are used with a steel frame (Photograph 4). It is pointless to insulate the cavity to fight this efficiency of heat transfer. Of course if it is pointless, we do it. The lunacy has progressed to the point where we are using higher and higher thermal resistance cavity insulations like expensive spray foams. Why waste money on cheap insulation when we can waste even more on expensive insulation? Figure 1: Efficient Heat Transfer—Steel studs are designed to provide the maximum possible conductive energy transfer across a wall using the minimum amount of material—a thin web with cleverly designed heat transfer fins (flanges) on both sides to efficiently absorb heat on one side and reject it on the other. Photo 4: Conductive Heaven—Not much to say here except “what were you possibly thinking?” It is a waste to insulate the cavities. Exterior insulation is the only rational option here. The only solution is to insulate on the outside of the steel studs, which is easy, elegant, effective and efficient. Leave the cavity empty—put the insulation on the outside (Photograph 5). Done. Except when we actually do this, we don’t get the credit for it we deserve. We actually get penalized code wise and cost wise. Put an R-19 batt in a steel stud wall and you are lucky to get R-5 to R-6 in the real world. That’s equal thermal resistance wise to about 1 inch of rigid insulation installed on the outside of the steel studs. With an R-19 batt you meet the “nominal” code requirement. Know what “nominal” means? It means “in name only.” It is not the true performance. In a perversion of thermodynamics, most codes require you to install 4 inches of rigid insulation on the outside of the steel studs—a “real” R-20 – to meet “equivalence” to the code stipulated “nominal” R-19. Photo 5: Exterior Insulation—The pink is the exterior insulation. The blue is the rain control layer (drainage plane) and the air control layer (air barrier) and the vapor control layer. The brown is the brick cladding. If life was fair, 1 inch of rigid insulation on the outside of a steel stud wall assembly would be equal to installing R-19 in the cavity. It is equal in the real world, but not in the code world.3 The point here is that you are throwing away 75 percent of your thermal resistance with these thermal bridges—and that is only in the field of the wall. It gets much worse elsewhere, as we will see. Other thermal bridges reduce overall R-value even more. Okay, the field of the wall is easy—exterior insulation. Now it gets ugly. How do you handle the frame? How about running the insulation past the frame as with the exterior insulation on the steel studs in the infill wall? Not so fast. How are you going to support the cladding with this exterior insulation between it and the structure? That masonry veneer that architects love and client’s want is typically supported on a relieving angle welded to plates cast into the concrete slab edge (Figure 2). Or even more thermally conductive, the relieving angle is attached directly to a steel frame. Figure 2:"Clint Eastwood" Thermodynamics—“The Good” uses offsets and exterior insulation. “The Bad” only uses exterior insulation. “The Ugly” uses neither. Running the exterior insulation over the upturned angle doesn’t get you much because the two dimensional heat transfer gets you bad (see heat rejection efficiency of steel studs earlier). You spend a lot more money on the steel angle. It now has to be wide enough to accommodate the thickness of the exterior insulation and thick enough to handle the moment loading.4 The thicker angle transfers the heat even faster, so you actually loose more than you gain. So if we spend lots of money and get little in return, at least we are consistent. We can fix this by standing the steel angle off the face of the frame with “off-sets.” Steel “C-sections,” tubes or knife-edges are attached intermittently to the structural frame to hold the steel angle away from the frame, allowing exterior insulation to run past the steel angle between it and the frame (Photograph 6). Now, you can use a small and standard-sized steel angle because the stand-offs do all of the work. They handle that “moment” thing that worries structural engineers. This approach has the added advantage of better accommodating dimensional variations in the slab edge and allows for better rainwater control (“drainage plane”) details. Photo 6a: Offset Relieving Angle—The angle iron support for the brick veneer is held away from the structural frame allowing exterior insulation to run by. Photo 6b: Offset Relieving Angle—The angle iron support for the brick veneer is held away from the structural frame allowing exterior insulation to run by. Okay, so that wasn’t so ugly. You want ugly, I’ll give you ugly: balconies. The typical balcony is a portion of the structural slab cantilevered past the structural frame projecting outward into the wild blue yonder —the ultimate thermal bridge (Photograph 7). The easy answer to this problem is getting rid of balconies. Unfortunately, as with most really bad ideas, they have this illogical appeal to the reptilian part of our brain.5 Why build them? They never get used. Do you ever see people on them aside from smokers? But I digress. We will have balconies despite all logic to the contrary. Photo 7: The Ultimate Thermal Bridge—A balcony is an efficient concrete-to-air heat exchanger that transfer every last available BTU across the structure. Consider “off-set” point supports rather than cantilevering the slab. This works well with an articulated façade (Photograph 8 and Photograph 9). The balcony can be a precast unit that is gapped from the wall allowing exterior insulation to run past the balcony between the balcony and the structural frame of the building. Photo 8: Balcony Offset Point Supports—Precast balcony supported intermittently to break thermal bridge. Photo 9: Mind the Gap—Close-up of precast balcony supported intermittently. Note the gap between the balcony and the structure allowing exterior insulation to run by. What if you don’t want an articulated façade? Use the “off-set” point supports described previously. But, now hang the balcony precast units with threaded rods tied back to the columns of the structural frame (Photograph 10). Neat, eh? Photo 10: Hang in There—Offset point supports combined with tie rods. How about a stand-alone supporting structure (Photograph 11)? Or half a stand-alone tied back to the structure at the top and resting at grade on it’s own pier (that way there is not thermal bridge at the foundation)? Finally, a really impressive innovation from our structural engineering colleagues—stainless steel rods welded to reinforcing bars cast into the structural slab. The rods pass through a foam block that acts as a thermal break. The rods are staggered up and down to handle both compression and tension loads (Photograph 12). Photo 11: Stand-Alone Balcony—Balconies have their own structural frame and foundation. Photo 12: Structural Innovation—Thermal break at slab-balcony connection. Stainless steel rods are welded to reinforcing bars cast into the structural slab. The rods pass through a foam block that acts as a thermal break. The rods are staggered up and down to handle both compression and tension loads. You can take this approach even farther with projecting structural members. Who says we have to live with those thermal bridges? You want to get serious about energy efficiency? Get serious about thermal bridges. That means exterior insulation on steel studs and structural frames, off-set relieving angles for brick veneers and some serious structural-thermal thinking for balconies and projecting structural members. We mechanical engineers are going to have to get to know those structural engineers better. And then we both have to have a chat with the architect. Some interesting times are coming . . . Article by BSI written by Joseph Lstiburek of Building Science Corporation and posted on buildingscience.com. Hope some enjoy this type of Science. Marcel Cyr Home and Commercial Property Inspections IAC2 Certified NACHI04070211 http://co.nachi.org/inachiawards Commercial Builder CertainTeed Master Shingle Applicator Shingle Technology Ouellet Associaties Inc. http://www.oaconstruction.com/ |
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