Articles - Home Energy Magazine
Here are some excerpts from the article:
• Armstrong has been installing sprayed
polyurethane foam (SPF) since 1980, and is the largest residential
installer of SPF in the United States. In addition to having excellent
insulating and reflective properties, SPF has a much longer life
span, as a waterproofing membrane, than traditional tar
and gravel roofs. SPF roofs can last 50 years or longer,
as long as they are protected with a UV coating, which should
be applied every 12 to 15 years. The costs associated with SPF
are about 40%–50% higher than the cost of tar and gravel
roofs, but the paybacks (through longer life and better insulating
performance) more than make up the difference.
• It's amazing to watch
the spray-on process—the foam is sprayed very thinly and
it expands and hardens immediately.
• Home performance contractors
would be wise to investigate SPF roofing and
recommend it in the right circumstances and applications
If you're a homeowner, whom do you call when you
find mold in a closet and on the ceiling of a bedroom? How about
when paint starts peeling on your dining room wall? Whom do you
call when there's standing water in your crawl-space? Whom do
you think to contact when it's getting harder and more expensive
to keep the house warm in the winter?
Readers of Home Energy instinctively know that these problems
fall under the domain of a home performance contractor. But the
average homeowner probably doesn't know where to turn. In my position
as the program administrator for the California Building Performance
Contractors Association (CBPCA) for the past four years, I have
been intimately involved in getting the home performance message
out to both contractors and homeowners. But I'm not a contractor
myself, and my own
home in Richmond, California, wasn't performing well during this
past winter. Luckily I knew whom to call, so I enlisted the help
of Applied Home Performance, a CBPCA member contractor in my area.
First, some background about the house. My wife and I own a 1,171ft
one-story house that was built in 1929. Significant features include
lath-and-plaster walls; a 1940s vintage gravity furnace without
a thermostat (a key regulates its operation); a complete absence
of insulation; a flat tar-and-gravel roof; an unsealed, 30-inch-high
crawlspace; and a 20-inch-high attic space. The only home performance
upgrades I had completed were installing double-paned windows
(more to cut down on noise than to save energy) and replacing
the water heater with a tankless model. Suddenly, you can see
why there were performance problems.
We've lived in the house for eight years with our dog, our cat,
and my wife's many orphaned plants. Winters in the San Francisco
Bay Area require some mechanical form of heating, and we found
that the gravity furnace was adequate for meeting most of our
heating needs. We'd turn it on when we were home in the evening
and often kept it on low throughout the night.However, the furnace
is very inefficient. We'd usually have one or two months each
winter where our heating bills would reach
$150– $200. But this past winter brought significantly higher
natural gas rates—
which meant we needed to ration our furnace use. So we rarely
kept the furnace on throughout the night, opting to wait until
we woke up to turn it on. Blankets and sweaters helped us survive
the wet and cool winter. But the lower interior temperatures brought
some bad (but predictable) consequences to our home, such as condensation
on the windows and doors and "ghosting" along the ceiling
surfaces. Mold started appearing on the ceiling of a bedroom closet
and along the ridge of the ceiling in the other bedroom, where
it adjoined an exterior wall. The coup de grace was when paint
started to peel in the dining room, along another exterior wall.
Getting Professional Help
That was when I called Robert Mitchell of Applied Home Performance.
Robert and Kevin Beck arrived on a Monday morning in early March
and proceeded to performance-test the entire house. The first
startling finding was that the relative humidity (RH) indoors
was 85%! The second was that the surface temperature on the dining
room wall was 56°F while the rest of the house was about 62°F.
Visual inspections of the roof, attic, and crawlspace revealed
cracks in the roof parapet,significant moisture on the sidewalls
of both the attic and the crawl-space, and even some standing
water in one corner of the crawlspace. The ground in the crawlspace
was very moist along the edges.Finally,the fireplace chase was
unsealed on both top and bottom. Robert and Kevin then ran a blower
door test that revealed our one positive piece of news: Infiltration
was relatively low, due to the lath-and plaster walls and double-paned
windows. Infiltration was measured at 1,290 CFM at -50 Pa, equating
to 0.34 ACH. Since the gravity furnace didn't use ducts, a duct
test
was impossible.
Based on their tests, our course of action became
obvious: Get the house warmer and drier. This meant sealing the
crawlspace, upgrading (actually replacing) the furnace and making
it controllable, insulating the attic with blown-in cellulose,
upgrading ventilation in both the kitchen and the bathroom, repairing
the roof leaks, and sealing the fireplace chase. Before any work
was started, Robert left two data
loggers (one inside and one in the crawlspace) in order to measure
temperature and RH over a ten-day period. The captured data confirmed
our fears. Temperature in the house was consistently between 57°F
and 63°F (much lower in the crawlspace), and
RH was always between 65% and 85%. No wonder mold was starting
to grow! Soon thereafter, Robert and his crew (Matt, Ricardo,
Christian, Matt Jr., and Finian) started the retrofit. The first
task was cleaning and sealing the crawlspace. Insulation was installed
on the sidewalls, a vapor barrier was put on the floor, and all
framing gaps were sealed. A small ventilation fan was also installed
in the crawlspace. The fan is vented to the outside through an
existing vent opening that was then sealed all around. Then we
had to decide what type of heating system would replace the gravity
furnace. A Manual J calculation revealed that our home's heating
load (assuming a sealed crawlspace and R-38 insulation in the
attic) was only 27,000 Btu per hour. An obvious option was a hydronic/radiant
heating system that would run off the water
heater and require a small air handler. However, our tankless
water heater was a poor match for the hydronic system, and the
labor costs for installing the radiant tubing were more than we
wanted to spend. Therefore, we decided to install a 35,000 Btu
per hour, 94% efficient, sealed-combustion forced-air furnace
in the crawlspace along with the requisite ducts and registers.
A programmable thermostat would give us all the control we'd need.
With work down below progressing smoothly,we tackled
the attic next.The attic floor was cleaned and sealed, and the
attic vents were screened to keep out rodents. That's when we
were hit with a big monkey wrench. At one spot on the underside
of the roof there was significant condensation—evidence
of a sizable roof leak. A roofer who works with Applied Home Performance
did a closer examination and discovered that the last application
of tar and gravel in 1997 did not include a complete tear-off
of the previous roof.Gravel was penetrating the building surface,
causing the leakage. Since the lifespan of a tar-and-gravel roof
is typically ten years anyway, we discussed a new tar-and-gravel
application with Applied Home Performance. But then a chance meeting
sent us in a different direction.
SPF on the Roof
The next day I attended a CBPCA meeting and ran into Mitch Fine,
the owner of Armstrong Foam Roofing in Emeryville. Armstrong has
been installing sprayed polyurethane foam (SPF) since 1980, and
is the largest residential installer of SPF in the United States.
In addition to having excellent insulating and reflective properties,
SPF has a much longer life span, as a waterproofing membrane,
than traditional tar and gravel. SPF roofs can last 50 years or
longer, as long as they are protected with a UV coating, which
should be applied every 12 to 15 years. The costs associated with
SPF are about 40%–50% higher than the cost of tar and gravel,
but the paybacks (through longer life and better insulating performance)
more than make up the difference.
The 1 - inch-thick spray application is an integrated insulated
roofing material delivering R-9 without any seams or layers.
Armstrong inspected the roof three days later
and told us that it was an excellent candidate for SPF. The flat
surface made for easy application and the spray-on foam would
eliminate the need for regular patches to the parapet. Armstrong
would need three days to complete the installation, but the installation
couldn't happen until the rains stopped and Armstrong caught up
on its backlog. This was a particularly wet winter and spring
season in the Bay Area, a place where rain is rare between early
April and late October.
At this point the retrofit was becoming more extensive, complicated,
lengthy, and expensive. Our routines were disrupted—my wife
works parttime and was home often as the workers moved in and
out of the house. But we trudged on. Cutouts were made for five
registers.The new furnace was installed in the crawlspace along
with R-8 metal jacket flex ducts.The floor cavity from which the
gravity furnace was removed
became the return plenum.
The small ventilation fan in the bath- room (which
was found to be disconnected in the attic!) was replaced with
a Fantech inline model, controlled by a timed motion switch. The
new fan included a Y-joint, so that an additional vent could be
placed directly above the shower stall.The fan was so quiet that
we couldn't tell if it was actually on. A new 1,200 CFM range
hood with an inline Fantech motor was installed in the kitchen
and ducted outside through the attic.This hood was necessary to
increase the removal of moisture and to replace a small exhaust
fan that was inadequate to meet the needs of our 36-inch gas stove,
which has four burners and a range top grill. We performance tested
the range hood by grilling chicken pieces (with the skin intact)
and sausages in order to generate as much smoke as possible. The
hood worked like a dream and a Fantech inline silencer greatly
reduced the noise in the kitchen … quieter than most bathroom
fans!
After a week of sunshine and temperatures in the
high 60s—enough to dry out the attic—the crew from
Armstrong arrived to start the roofing process. First, all of
the gravel was cleaned off, making the existing surface as smooth
as possible. Next, all protuberances and cracks were sealed. Finally,
the SPF and coating were blown onto the roof surface. It's amazing
to watch the spray-on process—the foam is sprayed very thinly
and it expands and hardens immediately. The SPF covers the complete
roof surface, including the wall and cap of the parapet. Home
performance contractors would be wise to investigate SPF
roofing and recommend it in the right circumstances and
applications. An SPF roof can reduce attic insulation requirements
and is ideal in certain climates.
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