Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: PortugalProjectI’m swayed towards underfloor heating at the moment.Underfloor heating is normally good, but as you have damp walls you might want to lay it in a limecrete floor on granular insulation (rather than concrete) so it remains vapour-permaiable and doesn't leave the walls as the only way for moisture to escape. It would be interesting to know what the existing floor is made from.
Posted By: PortugalProjectThe opposing long wall is leaning significantlySounds like the advice of a structural engineer may be a good idea. On a potentially related topic, what is the local seismic risk?
Posted By: PortugalProjectI did read about a new product for flooring that is small hollow clay balls giving excellent insulation fast and easy to lay etc, BUT is in uk only that I could find.
Posted By: PortugalProjectAhhh Portuguese structural engineers! €275 a very good price, the report?.... “yeah it’ll be ok, it’s stood hundreds of years and survived the giant earthquake in the 1700sâ€Doesn't surprise me, and they may be right - or the next one might fell it.
Posted By: Dominic CooneyWe used LECA and were very pleased with it. Breathable floor construction, with UFH.
Should be some posts / pictures on here, if you can’t find them let me know.
Posted By: PortugalProjectHmmm not sure why the quote isn’t working
the idea of making a truly sealed passivehaus style project seems impossible to me
UK engineer
Posted By: PortugalProjectSo I’m sure a major debate or conversation but in layman’s terms are we saying that air tightness we are restricting the airflow, were as with the breathable aspect it’s the actual materials ability to breathe?
Posted By: djhOh and FWIW I used two* engineers on my project (one straw bales, one passive slab foundation) and neither came to my site.But it's a slightly different case when an engineer is certifying plans vs examining and giving advice on dealing with an existing building. E.g., for my old house I had a problem with the front steps slipping down the hill; I sent a structural engineer some photos from which he was pretty sure of what was going on but neither he nor I would have been happy to go with that until he'd come and had a look himself.
There are some cases of vapour tight but not airtight I think but I can't remember any right now.I'm having a hard time imagining that; anything which is sufficiently open to gas flow to be considered not airtight would automatically let enough vapour through to be considered not vapour tight - particularly as water vapour molecules are smaller than the main air molecules (Oâ‚‚ and Nâ‚‚) so even a molecular sieve wouldn't work that way.