Home  5  Books  5  GBEzine  5  News  5  HelpDesk  5  Register  5  GreenBuilding.co.uk
Not signed in (Sign In)

Categories



Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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.

Buy individually or both books together. Delivery is free!


powered by Surfing Waves




Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.

Welcome to new Forum Visitors
Join the forum now and benefit from discussions with thousands of other green building fans and discounts on Green Building Press publications: Apply now.




    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    I'm planning a small, timber garden hut for my wife to work in. It needs to be warm and dry; we live in the West of Scotland with high rainfall.
    I'm planning on a shepherd's hut style design. The walls will be timber and the roof corrugated steel. Exterior cladding will be 20mm larch, running vertically with battens to close the gap between boards.
    I'm looking into insulation but wondering if it's really necessary. Insulation works by trapping air, right? Could I not just trap the air between my inner and outer wall skins and do away with insulation? I appreciate that no timber void built this way will be airtight, indeed I'd encourage a degree of airflow for ventilation and condensation dispersal.
    For me the down sides of insulation are:
    1) It costs money
    2) It is a good place to trap condensation/water (a timber biulding in Scotland will absorb moisture)
    3) It's a nice cosy home for mice

    This 7ft x 12ft hut will be heated by a 3Kw woodburning stove, so when its cold there will be heat on tap. On a hot day, it may be beneficial to have a slowly moving current of air into the bottom of the walls and out the top.
    I realise that insulation will protect from overheating in summer, but my experience with lightweight timber biuldings (or even upstairs in any attic-trussed house) is that eventually the heat soaks through and it's just very hot until the sun goes down.
    It makes me wonder if I'd be smarter just to use the 50mm air gap between my timber walls as my "insulation". The same may apply to my tin-exterior, timber-interior roof?
    Any one got a view on this?
    • CommentAuthorDarylP
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    Wul, if you have lots of money/wood/time to heat it in winter, or do not intend to use the hut when it is cold outside, you will be fine.....:neutral:

    Otherwise, use 'plastic' insulation, PIR/phenolic/XPS with a VCL on the warm side. Then condensation should not be an issue, and I don't think the mice like Celotex that much?

    With the sun on the roof it might be oven-like in there?

    Insulate, or you may regret it later I feel.

    Good luck:smile:
    • CommentAuthorskyewright
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    Posted By: WulAny one got a view on this?

    Ventilated space is not the same thing as insulation.

    That aside, I know someone who's been living in a shed of about that size here on Skye for much of the time for around 5 years now while slow total refurbishment of the adjacent cottage is underway. Basically it's a standard garden shed, with PUR/PIR style solid insulation on the internal face of the walls & roof, and with wriggly tin (salvaged from the cottage) added to the roof over the basic felt. An entrance lobby has been arranged inside the door. Heating when needed is a small electrical heater, I'm not sure of the power rating. This winter she's been able to sleep in the cottage in the worst weather (to get away from the noise as much as anything), but the shed really was home in the earlier years.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    Air in a void isn't trapped; it's free to move around. Convection will transfer heat moderately effectively.

    Apart from any legal aspects (planning/building control) I think you'd be mad not to put in some insulation. It doesn't have to be a huge amount, 100 mm of mineral wool wouldn't be that expensive or take up much space, but would make a big difference to the comfort and the amount of heating required. The other thing to do is to make sure you get good airtightness and sensible control of the ventilation (he says, having just spent a winter in a drafty static caravan on the east coast of Scotland). You need good airtightness outside the insulation to stop the wind blowing through the insulation and bypassing it. Also good airtightness inside to prevent moisture getting to the outside surface and condensing.

    Note, if you're keeping the inside warm you'd need airtightness on the inside irrespective of the insulation. Even with your 50 mm gap the outer surface will still be at outdoor temperatures and subject to condensation.
    • CommentAuthorTimSmall
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    Posted By: Wultimber garden hut for my wife to work in. It needs to be warm and dry; we live in the West of Scotland[...]
    I'm looking into insulation but wondering if it's really necessary. Insulation works by trapping air, right?


    Yes.

    Could I not just trap the air between my inner and outer wall skins and do away with insulation?


    As has already been said - nope, because the air will rotate within the cavity, and move heat from the inner skin to the outer skin like a conveyor belt.

    Like Figure 7 b in this page:

    http://www.buildingscience.com/documents/digests/bsd-011-thermal-control-in-buildings

    ... but a lot more - so, since the insulation won't slow it down (note that this effect only happens with low density insulation. You'll also get heat transfer by radiation across the cavity.

    I'd echo the advice to pay a lot of attention to making it airtight, especially with your location... You want to put the amount of ventilation under the control of the occupant, rather than under the control of the weather.

    If I was building that structure, then I think I'd be tempted to put 50 to 100mm of PIR outside of the studs (and possibly 100mm of mineral wool between), and just have a little fan heater (which will seldom be needed), and dispense with the wood burner.
    • CommentAuthorTimSmall
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2013
     
    What Ed said. There is an optimum size for an air gap. Over about 15mm (?) you start getting convection which significantly increases heat loss.

    Aside: Double glazing gap is typically optimised to minimise this heat loss. If you want to cut down noise then i believe the optimum gap for glass is more like 100-150mm.
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Thanks for the comments, that's helpful.
    I'm not familiar with these abbreviations, PIR? VLC? (vapour....?)

    Now that its been pointed out, I can see that convection would be a problem. In the depths of winter, the outside timber cladding will be frozen solid, any warm air circulationg behind this is going to produce drips like several taps. I'd definately use a vapour barrier.
    I would not have been that concerned with airtightness of the outer skin but I clearly need to re-think this.
    I was tending towards board and batten (vertically) for the outer rain-skin since it's cheaper and more "rustic" than horizontal shiplap. However I doubt it would be very airtight, its just one piece of off-saw wood nailed in front of another. At least shiplap has an interlocking groove which should help with airtightness a bit?
    Having said that, shiplap never fits perfectly, the boards always flex and I've had many sheds where daylighgt passes through the boards in hot, dry weather. So, maybe board and batten after all?

    OK, so definately insulation. I'm convinced. (this is for my wife; it has to be right!)

    I'm not a fan of the rigid Kingspan/Celotex stuff for this application. I've found it very difficult in real life to cut it accurately and get it to fit snugly between the various studs, dwangs (noggins) etc in a timber frame. Plus it makes a mess when cut.
    I'd prefer wool bats, probably sheep, so that I can "stuff" it in a little and know that air gaps are sealed. I'm never confident with the rigid stuff that air won't just bypass gaps. The rigid stuff is so expensive that I find myself loath to re-cut a piece that won't fit properly.

    I do sometimes wonder though, about the bogey-man of condensation. Any one got links to actual experiments or pictures of real-life buildings where condensation has been a problem?

    I will definately heat with wood. I have access to a woodland, so very cheap fuel. Plus, it is much more pleasant than electric.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Mike George is your man about Condensation.
    When I did my loft I put up an RH logger, it never showed that condensation would be a problem.
    When I put a new shed in I bought a cheap one, was a big mistake as I am sure I could have made a better one that was more air and water tight and better insulated.
    • CommentAuthorrhamdu
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Posted By: Ed DaviesYou need good airtightness outside the insulation to stop the wind blowing through the insulation and bypassing it. Also good airtightness inside to prevent moisture getting to the outside surface and condensing.

    Yes but there is a distinction. The inner surface needs to be vapour-tight, e.g. polythene sheet sealed with tape. (Somebody: is there a green alternative to this?)

    The outer surface should be wind-resistant ('airtight' is overdoing it) and vapour-permeable or 'breathable', otherwise any moisture which does get into the interior of the wall cannot escape.

    However you do the rain-skin boarding, there will be some movement gaps, so it might be an idea to fix a breathable membrane and batten before boarding. One of the roofers in this forum can provide detailed instructions, I am sure.

    I do understand why you asked the question 'is insulation necessary', since a 3kW woodburner in a well-insulated shed of that size sounds like the spec for a sauna.
  1.  
    I work in an uninsulated single glazed office & its not a comfortable place in winter. Even with a low level radiator running half the length of the outside wall, there's a constant draught caused by cold air falling down the front of the windows & the constant feeling of cold due to the radiative heat loss to the cold surfaces. In windy weather you also get the draught through the gaps around the windows, but generally speaking windy days are not so cold.

    Even 50mm of insulation will change it from an out-building to a habitable space. When heating with mains gas, the value for money point is at around 100-150mm of mineral wool or 70-100mm of polyisocyanurate (PIR) or polyurethane (PUR). It may be with your low cost wood supply the value for money point is closer to the bottom end of this range, depending upon what you charge for your labour.

    As others have said, make sure you have a wind barrier on the outside of the insulation & an air barrier/vapour control layer on the inside. This is most easily achieved with a breather membrane (e.g. Tyvek) on the outside & polyethylene on the inside.

    David
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013 edited
     
    Posted By: Wul: “I'm not familiar with these abbreviations, PIR? VLC? (vapour....?)”

    PIR ~= PUR = polyisocyanurate http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyisocyanurate (Celotex, etc)

    VCL = yes, vapour control layer. The polythene sheet in rhamdu's comment:

    “Yes but there is a distinction. The inner surface needs to be vapour-tight, e.g. polythene sheet sealed with tape.

    The outer surface should be wind-resistant ('airtight' is overdoing it) and vapour-permeable or 'breathable', otherwise any moisture which does get into the interior of the wall cannot escape.”
    • CommentAuthorjms452
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    I imagine that a hut of this size with a person (and computer and light?) inside and even a moderate amount of insulation wouldn't be far of a passiv-hut(TM)!

    The stove will probably end up being used to warm the structure then left to burn down...

    about 50m2 surface area
    100m rockwool = 0.4W/m2/k
    200W consumed inside makes the inside 9C warmer than outside...
    bear in mind a person is about 100W!
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Don't forget ventilation heat losses which are proportionally larger on a small structure when you size things in liters/person·minute rather than air changes per hour.
    • CommentAuthorjms452
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Indeed - 8L/min at 9C is about 90W! (this might be a bit high for one person).

    The hole in the wall needed for the stove could probably do 10x that
    • CommentAuthorTimSmall
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    Vapour is a shorthand for water vapour i.e. water as a gas. It's sometimes helpful to think of it as water 'dissolved' in the air.

    Just like sugar in jam going from liquid to solid when you cool it, 'condensation' is the water going from gas to liquid onto a cold surface.

    Also, just like the jam analogy - the % of sugar is analogous to the relative humidity. More sugar and it'll start solidifying at a higher temperature. More humidity and it'll start condensing at a higher temperature. The comfortable humidity range for people is about 40% to 60%.

    Regarding condensation damage - yes it's definitely real, and I've seen it quite a few times.

    I seem to be quoting Building Science quite a few times in this thread (in the US timber frame is king after-all), but these two articles from them are quite a good introduction:

    http://www.buildingscience.com/documents/insights/bsi-049-confusion-about-diffusion/#foot03

    http://www.buildingscience.com/documents/insights/bsi-009-new-light-in-crawlspaces/files/BSI-009_Crawlspace_2010r2.pdf


    Re Celotex and fitting. I'd recommend cutting it slightly short, and foaming around the edges with something like this:

    http://uksealants.co.uk/illbruck-fm330-air-tight-expanding-foam--p281.html

    (or just a bog-standard 'gun grade' expanding foam if you're reluctant to go for the posh stuff).

    Also - best not to cut rigid insulation boards up very much at all - instead stick it outside of your timber frame to keep the timber frame itself nice and toasty and dry. I'd recommend not bothering with a vapour control layer - just go for something like "figure 7" from the first building science link - this would be something like 40mm of polystyrene, or 25mm or PIR (Celotex) outside the timber frame, and 80mm or so of flexible batt insulation inside of the frame.

    If you want to reduce the total amount of insulation, make sure that you do so either proportionally (e.g. 20mm polystrene with 40mm of flexi-batt), or just cut the inner insulation (e.g. 25mm PIR + 50mm batt).
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2013
     
    " Also - best not to cut rigid insulation boards up very much at all - instead stick it outside of your timber frame "

    I do like this idea; one major reason is that I am loath to loose the "relief" you get inside a small timber building from all the studs and joists. They are great for turning into shelves and cupboards with very little effort.
    It seems inelegant to have to build two walls and also hide that lovely, useful studwork.

    I'd love someone to create a (preferrably timber faced) product that could form both the outer and inner finsished surface in one fix.
    I was in a corrugated metal producer's factory today and they had a product that was like a very large, metal-skinned, foam filled, shiplap profile wall board. It was ,say 150mm thick with maybe 0.3mm thick aluminium skin and a celotex-like interior rigid foam. About 200mm high with a fairly complex sealing profile edged with fluffy draught proofing. I'm not sure if it could take a structural load, but it looked like you could just stack it up and have a finished. waterproof, wind proof insulated wall in minutes. However, I do not want a metal shed and the embodied energy in this product would be high.
    It makes me wonder if chiped and superheated timber could be moulded or blown into a form?

    Thank you for the comments, this is a very well informed forum
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJun 14th 2013 edited
     
    Posted By: WulI'd love someone to create a (preferrably timber faced) product that could form both the outer and inner finsished surface in one fix.

    They do. They're called SIPs ...

    I was in a corrugated metal producer's factory today and they had a product that was like a very large, metal-skinned, foam filled, shiplap profile wall board. It was ,say 150mm thick with maybe 0.3mm thick aluminium skin and a celotex-like interior rigid foam.

    ... and they make them with metal skins too. Both types are fairly expensive.

    But that doesn't grant your wish because you still need a ventilated gap. You still need to build a rainscreen in front of the SIP.
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 14th 2013
     
    That's interesting about the S.I.P.s
    I was toying with approaching the company who made the timber frame for my house, to see if they would do panels for a shed. ( Although I prefer the word "hut"). They started making SIPS a couple of years ago.
    It may be daft to ask a house maker to make panels for a hut but it would be fun to see if they are interested and maybe it would work out a similar cost to doing it myself?
    This hut will be on wheels, so weight is also an issue.
    • CommentAuthorTimSmall
    • CommentTimeJun 14th 2013
     
    The advantage of using PIR on the outside is that it is in the zone where you could get condensation, and PIR (or expanded polystrene) is pretty much condensation-proof when used in this way.

    If you'd like to make use of the timber frame for alcoves/shelving etc, then you could stick plasterboard, or OSB on the outside of the studs, then the Celotex on the outside of that, then vertical battens (strips of 12.5mm ply will be plenty, if you get the rest of it airtight), to create a ventilated gap and stainless mesh to keep animals out of the gap, then your larch over that.

    That should end up being a pretty bullet-proof constructions, especially as with exposed timbers, you'll be able to see any rain water ingress straight away.
    • CommentAuthorPaulJ
    • CommentTimeJun 14th 2013
     
    What is your budget, how many hours work are you willing to do and do you need windows / natural light?
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 18th 2013
     
    Hi Paul,

    My budget is around Ă‚ÂŁ4k for a finished 6.5ft x 12ft hut, insulated, tin roof, with a woodburner and flue and 3 windows.
    I reckon it will take me around 300hrs. (wild guess)
    I know from experience, working on my own that it will be slow work because every step is problem solving and learning.
    • CommentAuthorchuckey
    • CommentTimeJun 21st 2013
     
    Don''t forget the underfloor insulation!!
    Frank
  2.  
    My 8ft x 15ft x 12ft high (to ridge) shed cost about Ă‚ÂŁ2500 - Ă‚ÂŁ3000 in materials. It's post and beam with 2 x 2x2 vertical and horiz battens between posts to reduce thermal bridging. It has 100mm recyc plas quilt between floor jsts, 100mm sheep's wool (in 2x50) in the walls and 100mm recyc cotton in the roof. The big shortcoming so far, as alluded to earlier in your thread, is unwanted air infiltration. When I get around to finishing off all the unfinished bits the 300W elec rad I have should be more than adequate, particularly as the 'sitty bit' is only 7.3ft x 7ft x 1.8 high with sloping soffits.

    With a Ă‚ÂŁ4k budget and only 6.5 x 12 to do you will be able to have bells and whistles.

    If I had been prepared to use Pu I could have reduced the heat-loss significantly, BTW.

    And yes, as it's immediately next to the boundary it needed planning perm.
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 25th 2013
     
    Thanks Nick,
    It's great to see picture of other people's projects, very inspiring. I don't want bells and whistles, but I would like nice (good quality) windows and door. Your hut looks like it's got good bones; I like the big overhang on the roof.

    Chuckey- re; floor insulation, I was thinking of adopting the method used in caravans, basically two sheets of plywood (they use 5mm believe it or not) with a rigid foam sandwiched in between, using battens for strength and to stitch the 8x4' sheets together. It's all very man-made I'm afraid; the performance and thinness /lightness of modern materials keeps seducing me.

    I have found a source of local timber for the framing and cladding and roofing though.
  3.  
    I'd lose the battens in the floor, just lay EPS over your lower sheeting layer, foam gun any gaps and edges and lay your upper sheeting layer on top. 5mm ply, sounds too thin, would be very bouncy indeed if you didn't end up falling through it along with the stove and other heavy things, the caravan structure will be a fully bonded setup.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJun 25th 2013
     
    I like homemade 'SIPs', wish I had done my shed that way instead of the cheap and nasty one I bought.
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
     
    I've asked my local timber frame maker (Scotframe) if they would build my walls for me. Cheeky, but we'll see what they say. It would take them about 10 minutes, and me 4 days.

    I should have made it clear that this hut will be built on an old caravan chassis. So I will need some "joists" in the floor, running at right angles to the twin spars of the 'van chassis. (see pic)
    Willie; agree that 5mm is too thin, I was thinking of two layers of 9mm ply with 50mm kingspan or EPS sandwiched in between and using 50mm x 50mm battens for strength, either screwed or nail gunned together. (maybe some glue in the mix too?) You are right, the caravan stuff is tightly bonded which will add to its strength.
    I have my doubts about how strong this will be.
    Surprisingly, in the caravan I dismantled, the corner levelling jacks act directly on the plywood floor and not the metal chassis as I would have expected. This leads me to think that the ply sandwich must be a very strong, rigid unit. I will make one and see.
    When the whole hut is screwed together it becomes a monocoque structure, I think, which adds to strength.
    I bought one of those incredibly cheap and nasty cardboard honeycomb doors from B&Q yesterday ( to use as a desk) and it was amazingly light and strong, it could be used as a desk with just a support at each end of its two metre span. (although I added support under it)
    Sorry, no pics, It won't let me upload jpgs or Tif files; ...weird
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
     
    Here's the chassis
    • CommentAuthorWul
    • CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
     
    And here's the door/desk
   
The Ecobuilding Buzz
Site Map    |   Home    |   View Cart    |   Pressroom   |   Business   |   Links   
Logout    

© Green Building Press