Energy Efficient Home
"Design energy efficiency into your home at the start
and the benefits will pay off for years to come..."

You have much to consider when designing and building a new energy efficient home, and it
can be a challenge...
Study after study shows that the total energy used during the life of a typical home in Canada could be reduced
by at least 50% percent while also reducing the home’s long-term cost by approximately $150,000.00. With high
winter heating bills on the horizon in much of the country, this statement becomes apparent.
Simply increasing the thickness of exterior walls will dramatically decrease a typical new home’s energy
consumption. Over the life of the home, an increase in initial purchase price and financing would be offset by
lower energy and maintenance costs.
And even though some energy efficient home features are expensive, there are others that most home buyers can
afford.
While design, costs, options, and styles vary, most energy efficient homes have some basic elements in common: a
well-constructed and tightly sealed thermal envelope; controlled ventilation; properly sized, high efficiency
heating and cooling systems; and energy efficient doors, windows, and appliances.
Thermal Envelope:
A thermal envelope is everything about the house that serves to shield the living space from the outdoors. It
includes the wall and roof assemblies, insulation, air/vapour barriers, windows, and weather-stripping and
caulking.
Wall and Roof Assemblies:
Most builders use traditional wood frame construction. Wood framing is a “tried and true” construction technique
that may use a potentially renewable resource (wood) to provide a structurally sound, classically constructed
house.
Some of the available and popular energy efficient home construction methods include the following:
Structural Insulated Panels (SIPs): These sheets are generally made of plywood or oriented-strand board (OSB)
that is laminated to foam board. The foam may be 4 to 8 inches thick.
Because the SIP acts as both the framing and the insulation, construction is much faster than stick framing. The
quality of construction is often superior because there are fewer places for workers to make mistakes.
Insulating Concrete Forms (ICF). Houses constructed in this manner consist of two layers of extruded foam board
(one inside the house and one outside the house) that act as the form for a steel-reinforced concrete center.
ICFs are the fastest technique and least likely to have construction mistakes. Such buildings are also very
strong and easily exceed code requirements for areas prone to tornadoes or hurricanes. Because the insulated
concrete is able to resist sudden temperature change, homes built this way seem to be, dollar for dollar, most
energy efficient.
Insulation:
An energy efficient house has much higher insulation R-values than required by most local building codes.
An R-value is the ability of a material to resist heat transfer, and the lower the value, the faster the heat
loss. For example, a typical house in Ontario might have insulation of R-17 in the exterior walls and R-31 in the
ceiling, while the floors and foundation walls may not be insulated.
A similar, but well-designed and constructed house will have insulation levels that range from R-20 to R-50 in
the walls and from R-40 to R-70 in the ceilings.
Foundation walls and slabs should be as well insulated as the living space walls. Poorly insulated foundations
have a negative impact on home energy use and comfort, especially if the family uses the lower parts of the house
as a living space.
Also, appliances—such as domestic hot water heaters, washers, dryers, and freezers— that supply heat as a
byproduct are often located in the basement.
Air/Vapour Barriers:
Water vapour condensation is a major threat to the structure of a house, no matter what the climate. In cold
climates, pressure differences can drive warm, moist indoor air into exterior walls and attics. The air condenses
as it cools.
A vapour barrier is a material or structural element that can be used to inhibit the movement of water vapour,
while an air barrier can inhibit airflow, into and out of a house’s envelope.
How to design and install vapour barriers depends a great deal on the climate and on the chosen construction
method. However, any water vapour that does manage to get into the walls or attics must be allowed to escape.
Regardless of climate, water vapour migration should be minimized by using a carefully designed thermal envelope
and sound construction practices. Systems that control air and water vapour movement in homes rely on the nearly
airtight installation of sheet materials on the interior as the main barrier.
Windows:
The typical home loses more than 25 per-cent of its heat through windows. Even modern windows insulate much less
than a wall (R-2 to R-5).
Therefore, an energy efficient house in a heating-dominated climate should, in general, have few windows on its
northern, eastern, and western sides.
The total window area should also not exceed 8 to 9 percent of the floor area for those rooms, unless the
designer is experienced in passive solar techniques. If this is the case, then increasing window area on the
southern side of the house to about 12 percent of the floor area is recommended. This is often called solar
tempering.
A properly designed roof overhang for south-facing windows will help prevent overheating in the summer.
North, east, and west windows should have low Solar Heat Gain. South windows with properly sized overhangs
should have a high SHGC to allow winter sun (and heat) to enter the house.
The best windows are awning and casement styles because these often close tighter than sliding types.
Weather-stripping and Caulking:
You should seal air leaks everywhere in a home’s thermal envelope to reduce energy loss. Good air sealing alone
may reduce utility costs by as much as 20 percent when compared to other houses of the same type and age.
You can accomplish most air sealing by using two materials: caulking and weather-stripping. Caulking can be used
to seal areas of potential air leakage into or out of a house. And weather-stripping can be used to seal gaps
around windows and exterior doors.
Controlled Ventilation:
Since an energy efficient home is tightly sealed, it needs to be ventilated in a controlled manner. Controlled,
mechanical ventilation prevents health risks from indoor air pollution, promotes a more comfortable atmosphere, and
reduces air moisture infiltration, thus reducing the likelihood of structural damage.
Furnaces, water heaters, clothes dryers, and bathroom and kitchen exhaust fans expel air from the house, making
it easier to depressurize an airtight house if all else is ignored.
But natural-draft appliances may be back-drafted by exhaust fans, which can lead to a lethal buildup of toxic
gases in the house.
For this reason, sealed-combustion heating appliances, which use only outside air for combustion and vent
combustion gases directly to the outdoors, are very important for ventilation energy efficiency and safety.
Heat recovery ventilators (HRV) or energy recovery ventilators (ERV) are growing in use for controlled
ventilation in airtight homes.
These ventilators can salvage about 65 percent of the energy from the stale exhaust air and transfer that energy
to the fresh air entering by way of a heat exchanger inside the device. They can be attached to the central forced
air system or may have their own duct system.
Uncomfortable incoming air can be a serious problem in northern climates and can create moisture problems in
humid climates.
Heating and Cooling Systems:
Specifying the correct sizes for heating and cooling systems in airtight, energy efficient homes can be tricky.
Rule-of-thumb sizing is often inaccurate, resulting in wasteful operation.
Conscientious builders and heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning contractors size heating and cooling
equipment based on careful consideration of the thermal envelope characteristics.
Generally, energy efficient homes require relatively small heating systems, typically less than 50,000 Btu/hour
even for very cold climates.
Some require nothing more than sunshine as the primary source of heat along with auxiliary heat from radiant
in-floor heating, a standard gas-fired water heater, a small boiler, a furnace, or electric heat pump.
If an air conditioner is required, it’s often a small unit and sufficient for all but the warmest climates.
Sometimes only a large fan and the cooler evening air are needed to make the house comfortable. The house is closed
up in the morning and stays cool until the next evening.
Smaller-capacity heating and cooling systems are usually less expensive to buy and operate. This helps recover
the costs of purchasing more insulation, and other energy-efficient products, such as windows and appliances.
Carefully selected and placed vegetation in any climate also contributes to reduced cooling and heating
loads.
Energy-Efficient Lighting and Appliances:
Appliances with relatively high operating efficiencies are usually more expensive to purchase. However, higher
efficiency appliances provide a measure of insurance against increases in energy prices, emit less air pollution,
and are attractive selling points when the home is resold.
Home buyers should invest in high efficiency appliances—such as water heaters, clothes washers and dryers,
dishwashers, and refrigerators—especially if these appliances will be used a great deal.
Energy efficient lighting helps keep energy bills down by producing less heat and reducing cooling
requirements.
Fluorescent lighting, both conventional tube and compact, is generally the most energy efficient for most home
applications.
Solar Water Heating, Solar Cells and Wind Energy :
Alternative energies like solar and wind will increase in value as fossil fuel prices escalate. Solar
collectors, solar hot water systems, heat storage vaults, photovoltaic electricity, solar panels, solar greenhouses
and solar house plans will become more important in this century. According to Buckminster Fuller "We have wandered
too far from the roots." An energy crisis can only be avoided if we learn to rely on a diffuse, sustainable
resource like the sun.
Advantages and Disadvantages:
Houses that incorporate all of the above elements of energy efficiency have many advantages.
They feel more comfortable because the additional insulation keeps the interior wall at a more comfortable and
stable temperature.
The indoor humidity is also better controlled, and drafts are reduced. A tightly sealed air/vapour barrier
reduces the likelihood of moisture and air seeping through the walls.
They are also very quiet because the extra insulation and tight construction helps to keep exterior noise
out.
But these houses also have some potential disadvantages. They may cost more and take longer to build than a
conventional home if the builder is not familiar with the new construction techniques and products available on the
market.
Even though the house’s structure may differ only slightly from conventional homes, the builder and contractors
may be unwilling to deviate from what they’ve always done before. They may need more training if they have no
experience with these systems.
Building and Buying:
Before you start a home-building project, the building site and its climate should be carefully evaluated to
determine the optimum design and orientation for the house.
Decisions regarding appropriate windows, doors, and heating, cooling and ventilating appliances are central to
an efficient design.
Also the cost, ease of construction, the builder’s limitations, and local building code compliance should be
competently evaluated.
Some plans are relatively simple and inexpensive to construct, while others can be extremely complex and, thus,
expensive.
Construction costs can vary significantly depending on the materials, construction techniques, contractor profit
margin, experience, and the type of heating, cooling, and ventilation system chosen.
Because energy-efficient homes require less money to operate, many lenders now offer energy efficient mortgages
They typically have lower points and allow for the stretching of debt-to-income ratios.
In the end, your energy efficient home will provide you with superior comfort and lower operating costs, not to
mention a higher real estate market value
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