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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeApr 28th 2016 edited
     
    My first ever post in the New Build category! What fun, I am helping a local Italian, with a distinctly un-Italien view on house building, design his new build - 11 months to breaking ground. Modest 3-bed, single storey, north facing with high wooded slope to south, big overhangs to prevent overheating - yup no solar gain to think of, solar panels for DHW, super-insulated wood frame (no doubt more on that sometime), airtight (but only to the level motivated first-timers utterly ignorant of all things airtight can achieve without supervision), not sure about the slab or windows doors yet but I have explained what a MVHR system is and he is convinced. So shaping up well but it will not be PH for sure.

    Thing is, he has to heat with wood, he basically makes big things (like roofs) out of wood for a living and sells his bone dry offcuts pre-palletised for wood burners so it is pretty much inconceivable that he would use any other fuel source (not that there is gas available) and whilst he will pay extra to get a massive 6kW electricity supply it doesn't go far....

    So decision made, underfloor heating, wood burner with hot water to a TS. Weeeeelll. He will have a low heating demand. First question - what does that look like? - I have no idea, my guess is under 5kW but can someone please speculate a more accurate range. All the kit required for his wet system really adds up (he has pencilled in 15k (euros). But I have been wondering: what about fans in the walls. The internal walls are not yet final but decided is one main living room (kitchen, diner, lounge with large picture window across amazing view) and shortest possible corridor. It has already been established on here that MVHR just doesn't move enough energy around to transfer any useful heat but what about fans in the internal walls!?

    So given a starting point of a simple stand alone wood burner in the lounge, minimal use of electricity and no gas how do you make this house work? Fans at ceiling height between the lounge and the 3 bedrooms maybe - there will be a size that would work obviously. If my fluid dynamics knowledge is right these fans wouldn't affect the MVHR if the internal doors are open but correct me if I am wrong. Or maybe a really over-sized MVHR. Wife has decided tiled bathroom floors so perhaps infra-red and/or electric underfloor in these 2 rooms.

    It is a weird one but if anyone can come up with a solution it will be you guys!
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    How much saw dust does he have? You can get burners that can cope with all the dust and small bits he will not be able to sell to his customers.

    As to moving the heat.... Without heat storage a wood burner needs a lot of love and care to keep it going at the rate the heat is needed.
    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: ringiAs to moving the heat.... Without heat storage a wood burner needs a lot of love and care to keep it going at the rate the heat is needed.
    Awwww bugger - I hadn't thought about that! :shamed::shamed: low mass house too - Spoil sport!! :angry::angry:

    As for dust - masses! Bags and bags of it - not sure but I think he might sell that to someone for something too. Anyway - can't see the wood burner having beautiful dancing flames on sawdust!
    • CommentAuthorgyrogear
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Hmm - I'm thinking of something like a hypocaust... under the slab, with an outside hearth and chimney stack
    sound technique from Roman times...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypocaust

    gg
    • CommentAuthorCerisy
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    We use our wood burning stove to heat our new build here in France - huge amount of harvested wood available. It's a RIKA passive stove, 2 - 6 kw, and heats our posh lounge very quickly! Unfortunately the heat goes out through the double doors and then up the open plan stairs - so make sure he avoids them!

    Our MVHR needs to be balanced - can't find an expert at the moment - but I do feel it slowly balances the heat around the house. Perhaps consider vents above the lounge door to allow the heat to move out and spread around - open doors on the corridor will heat the other important rooms.
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: gyrogearHmm - I'm thinking of something like a hypocaust... under the slab, with an outside hearth and chimney stack
    sound technique from Roman times...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypocaust


    Does it not lead to lots of heat lost from the floor when the fire is not in use?
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Also as he sells his of-cuts of wood, his heading wood is not free. Therefore what is the cost/benefit of insulating to a level that does not need a heating system?
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: gyrogearI'm thinking of something like a hypocaust

    Posted By: ringiDoes it not lead to lots of heat lost from the floor when the fire is not in use?

    Just keep the fire burning all year round? :devil:
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    I wonder if it's possible to combine “oversized MVHR” internally which circulates a lot of air within the building to move heat around with a normal-rate MVHR to exchange air with the outside. Probably more economical and easier to control than having two separate systems. Supply and extract might want to be in different places, though…

    Maybe all the recirculation happens on the supply side: between the living rooms and bedrooms. Extract from the kitchen area of the main room and from the bathrooms goes straight out the MVHR.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeHe will have a low heating demand. First question - what does that look like? - I have no idea, my guess is under 5kW but can someone please speculate a more accurate range.

    Passivhaus limit is 15 kWh/m²/year for heating energy, and/or 10 W/m² instantaneous heating power. So if you know the floor area, you can work out the most a passivhaus could take. 'Low energy' houses might have heating demands up to say three times those limits.

    The first house I bought had warm air heating; gas-fired. It worked well for me, but it was noisy. I lived by myself so the heating was off until I came home and forced air is good for quick heating. I don't remember any problems sleeping but neither do I remember whether I left the heating on overnight!

    The main problem with ideas of moving air around to heat areas is that air needs to be quite hot to heat the space it's going to, which means the space it's coming from needs to be quite hot too (uncomfortably so, I would guess).

    I use a post-heater in my MVHR to heat the house now and one thing I have discovered is that some (most?) of the heat goes from the heater into the ducts and then into the void under the first floor that the ducts run through. That's by conduction through the plastic duct wall, not by leaks, BTW! So the air coming into the bedrooms is gently warm rather than hot, except for the bedroom nearest the MVHR unit, which is pretty warm but still not quite hot. The air is coming out of the post heater at 50°C when at full blast. It all still works because the heat is still inside the building and everything evens out.

    Just because nobody has done airtightness before is no reason not to achieve a good result. As long as there's a clear plan and somebody is on site in charge of that aspect who understands what's needed and is motivated to achieve it, it's not difficult.

    From your description, I'd say a UFH system in a concrete 'passive slab' was the way to go and preferably insulate the walls and roof with something like cellulose rather than rockwool, for example, to give a bit more thermal stability. The woodburner will need to be controllable or else have a large tank to buffer excess heat, or otherwise there'll likely be frequent opening of windows in winter I would guess. And winter could last quite a long time if there's no solar gain.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: ringiTherefore what is the cost/benefit of insulating to a level that does not need a heating system?
    Is that actually feasible without a reasonable amount of solar gain?
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: Ed Davies
    Posted By: ringiTherefore what is the cost/benefit of insulating to a level that does not need a heating system?
    Is that actually feasible without a reasonable amount of solar gain?

    I think I'd start with an earthship if I was thinking along those lines, but it would require some very careful design. There is a windowless museum wing that freewheels at about 15°C IIRC.

    But I think the premise is faulty. The wood for heating may not be entirely free but it is at trade price or better and the passivhaus criteria supposedly minimise overall cost with energy at retail prices. So lower cost energy might allow one to relax the criteria a bit rather than make them more onerous. OTOH there's the lack of solar gain so who knows where it balances out. Definitely a case where running PHPP would be useful to get a better idea of the actual requirements in that situation.
  1.  
    Thanks Cerisy - I'll point him at that make of stove (he already understands that he can't have an Italian WBS because they are crap). No chance of the heat going upstairs because, as I mentioned, this is a single storey building.

    DJH - that is very helpful - the house is 170m2 so PH is 2.5kW heat demand ish. That's good to hear about airtightness, but he works full time, he will not have a main contractor or a project manager and whilst they will mostly be 'mates' working for him, and hence motivated, there will just not be supervision and it is hard to explain just how far back in time the knowledge base is hereabouts. Anyway the Rika 2-6 kW sounds on the money! Really good tip about the cellulose too - he was edging towards a natural product inboard and I gently suggested he wouldn't need the humidity buffering with MVHR and he knows it is more expensive....I am sure I can undo my poor advice at this stage.

    All - selling the wood off cuts was about explaining he has very little (zero ish) work to get bone dry wood oak mostly - him making an income from this stuff is a red herring - hardly worth his effort he tells me, delivery, making the uniform size cages, customer hassle etc - and anyway he won't need much for his house will he!

    Another point is that mostly people heat single storeys/with forced air around here BUT is is from an oversized wood burner in one room which always gets too hot - vents come out in the top of that room and for the modern ones a couple come out in the bedrooms - ceilings within 2m have to be repainted every 6 months (don't ask just accept) - keeping a fire ticking over is what everybody does as std around here.

    With no solar gain and a youngster, a soon to be at least one dog and no 'air lock' and unsupervised trades one has to be realistic - what he is aiming for is like you guys trying for an interseasonal store. I'll work on 5kW. And the slab will yet become an issue.

    There is no loft (all vaulted ceilings) so already MVHR will be tricky. Fans and noise is something I know a lot about. I am thinking: a slightly oversized MVHR but balanced, plus thermostat controlled (incl temp differential) through wall mounted Centra thingies (that's 10, 15 or for boost 25 dB @ 3m).

    And cellulose insulation - any advantage in oversizing the slab a bit?

    Ed - so sort of a bypass valve on the MVHR's 2 pipes to outside combined with perhaps boost (but using the Aircycle this can be set anywhere), thermostatically controlled from stats in the bedrooms (plus a temp differential test), theory being that one doesn't need 24/7 MVHR for high AQ - maybe with intermittent normal mode, maybe timed (ie after being on bypass for 2 hours switch to bypass 45 mins normal 15mins) or maybe/and/or a CO2/humidity over-ride. No issue whatsoever with the controls as REUK will make me exactly what I want for astonishingly little money.
  2.  
    Posted By: gyrogearHmm - I'm thinking of something like a hypocaust... under the slab, with an outside hearth and chimney stack sound technique from Roman times...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypocaustgg

    Hmm imagine cleaning the 'flue' - just need a supply of disposable 6 year olds. :devil:
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeEd - so sort of a bypass valve on the MVHR's 2 pipes to outside combined with perhaps boost
    Yep, you could look at it that way. Or perhaps look at it as a recirculating heat transfer system between the living room and bedrooms into which the supply side of the MVHR feeds.
  3.  
    Not following you. Do you mean normal MVHR, set up normal, but seeing it as something else. If not, then baby level description of where pipes go please. :shamed:
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeThere is no loft (all vaulted ceilings) so already MVHR will be tricky.

    The roof will be quite thick though to contain the insulation so it may be possible to bury MVHR ducts in the insulation. Or place them directly under the apex and then add a bit of whatever boarding is used to form the vaulted ceiling horizontally underneath the duct. Or just leave the ducts exposed - Hockerton used clay drainpipes as ducts, suspended on bits of wire IIRC, if he fancies a different aesthetic to post-modern industrial.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeThat's good to hear about airtightness, but he works full time, he will not have a main contractor or a project manager and whilst they will mostly be 'mates' working for him, and hence motivated, there will just not be supervision and it is hard to explain just how far back in time the knowledge base is hereabouts.

    Airtightness is not difficult to understand. No holes - that's it! With a timber frame the main airtightness will presumably be either a membrane or glued sheets of OSB, which again is pretty easy to understand. The drawings do need to be clear about exactly where the airtightness layer is, and especially about how junctions work. And the design should allow construction in an order that allows the airtightness to be inspected and fixed easily - we did our first test before starting to build any internal walls, for example. If he's not going to be on site at the time, then he (the airtightness champion) needs to spend some time in advance thinking about how the next day or so's work will affect the airtightness and be prepared to redo a day's work if it goes off track.

    Once they got into the swing of it and realized I was serious, there were a couple of occasions where my carpenters spotted problems that I hadn't thought of, and figured out good solutions too.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    On further thought, I think my suggestion is a bad idea. Still, what I was thinking of was to have ducts with fans between the living room and the bedrooms to redistribute heat from the wood burner. Return would be via open doors or gaps under doors, etc. Supply side from MVHR would feed into that duct. Problem would be finding a point within the circulation ducts with a sensible neutral pressure to match the extract side of the MVHR.

    I'd agree with DJH that ducts under a vaulted ceiling needn't be a problem. Depending on the layout they could run above kitchen cupboards or otherwise be made to blend in most of the way. I'm planning vaulted ceilings for my living room and study with ducts and other services running across under the north-side ceiling boxed in with wood. Haven't decided how high up yet - originally though at the apex (as DJH suggests as a possibility) but now thinking lower down.
  4.  
    OK Ed now I get it - but agree there are better ways forward.

    Yup, I am already au fait with tricky ducting routing and mentioned the apex solution to him already - seems on side. Also mentioned apex solution to Cascina on a current thread and he was pleased too.

    Airtightness - last word on this as don't want to sidetrack this critical thread and I'll use this to illustrate a general point
    Posted By: djhThe drawings do need to be clear about exactly where the airtightness layer is, and especially about how junctions work
    What drawings, why will there be drawings of things like junctions let alone plumbing and electricity routing? Trust me there won't be! And there won't be airtightness tests either for sure - why would there be, and it would have to be DIY if there was - unless someone came from France to do one...But I agree: theoretically airtightness can be beaten and he is really motivated - might need your help though.

    With 90% efficient MVHR, outside air zero deg,extracting from living space air at 23 deg (as well as more normal rates of extract in 2 bathrooms) anyone able to guestispecucalculate what airflow would be needed into the bedrooms to achieve 19 deg, making any other assumptions needed. At this stage we really only need the decimal in the right place in order to gross error check the feasibility of doing it with MVHR alone or doing it with either 6,9 or 15 litres/sec Centra fans per bedroom and MVHR. Leaving aside the bathroom temps for now.

    Still interested in over sizing slab to help with ups and downs of WBS output without TS - silly idea, worth it? What other info needed? I have seen talk of incorporating massive structures (eg concrete staircases or banks of water tanks) inside lightweight houses to absorb solar gain for example - isn't this the same idea? Worth another thread to catch those not following this one? Ta guys and gals.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeStill interested in over sizing slab to help with ups and downs of WBS output without TS - silly idea, worth it?
    Directly (through UFH pipes) or indirectly, WBS heats the air which heats the slab?
    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016 edited
     
    Via the air and infrared to all surfaces then via conduction etc to slab - ie just increasing mass in this otherwise lightweight home so that there is some buffering of the temp swings. I live in a very heavy house and it doesn't matter what I do on a daily basis the temp can't swing by more than a deg. When heating from the TS once the fire is out I set the pump to 5 Watts, (for well over 350m2 of heated living space) and the TS water still does some good to under 40 deg just slowing the internal temp drop - conversely I can turn everything up max and pump around 75 deg water and it doesn't get hot quickly. I am sold on high mass esp where there are regular inhabitants.

    Point is to save on all the up front costs: capital, installation, commissioning, planning, permissions and certificates, plus the loss of living space and of course ongoing replacement and maintenance costs, that a wet system and TS inevitably causes. It wouldn't be possible, or at least be a lot more problematic, in a 2 storey house or a bigger house.

    The question is do the numbers look about right? My gut says yes only Ringi had a note of caution, no-one has yet said anything negative.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    I think downwards heat transfer from air is pretty slow, something like 6 or 7 W/m²·K. Given that you wouldn't want a big temperature difference between the air and the slab for comfort would that be enough to store useful amounts of heat?
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Personally I wouldn't bother with an all air solution - dirty, noisy and pretty ineffective unless you are prepared to put the heat into a heater battery in the air handling unit (ie mechanical ventilation with heat recovery)

    As the WB is a given, add a big thermal store, put in UFH fairly deep in the ground floor slab, run it low temp and just balance the slab to air temp with minimal (or better no) control with room zones

    Put in an indicator to give you an indication of store temperature and just light the WB when required - most people know it's cold outside and are expecting to light up anyway.

    I wouldn't bother with the solar thermal being integrated into the TS - just provide a HWS cylinder (in a suitable location) and use electric top up

    If you look at the SHC or water and air, it should be obvious that moving heat is far easier by water than air - and you can have far bigger delta T

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Most WB will give out most of the heat into the room it is in, and needs wood cut to size. Some wood boilers can take wood as long a 1m, and put 90% of the heat into the water in the TS with only 10% going into the boiler room.
    I therefore question using a WB to heat a TS.

    Use the wood burner for a quick heat up when needed and to look nice….

    A masonry stove is used in the USA to store heat and is often in the wall between two rooms, I don't know if a few masonry stoves would work.
    • CommentAuthorGotanewlife
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: Ed DaviesI think downwards heat transfer from air is pretty slow, something like 6 or 7 W/m²·K.

    I wouldn't know what slow or fast is - so that 6 or 7W per 1 deg difference per m2 means he might well only need 2 deg difference to achieve the aim given that PH is 10 W/m2 and hence perhaps he could achieve a 14W/m2 instant heat load requirement. Perhaps I am mixing apples and goats here?

    Also given the slab will eventually get up to temp; will it not then radiate 21 deg heat and if it is bigger then will it not radiate that temp for longer.

    Barney - not at all sure you have read this long conversation. My MVHR is either noisy or dirty and it is hard to see a Centura mounted in a stud wall between a bedroom and a living room being dirty and to your ears is 10dB noisy? As for 'bothering', as in it is not a big deal, the
    Posted By: GotanewlifePoint is to save on all the up front costs (EDIT 10k's worth): capital, installation, commissioning, planning (as in programming), permissions and certificates, plus the loss of living space and of course ongoing replacement and maintenance costs,

    Electricity is very expensive here and when you only have 6kW worth to start with taking 2kW out to heat DHW isn't clever, esp as the solar performance will be pretty poor given that site of his (no solar survey done yet). Not wanting to go down that rabbit hole at the mo, but for the record back up (or better joint primary provision) will probably be gas bottles with heater accepting warm water (covered on other threads recently) - obviously a small electric element will also go in to optimise the size of the gas heater and provide redundancy.
    Posted By: barneyit should be obvious that moving heat is far easier by water than air
    It is, but this thread is about practicalities of the more difficult method.

    Don't get me wrong I intuitively don't like the idea of multiple Centras even cleverly located coming out in the back of wardrobes etc and my Airflow is silent on normal but noisy on boost so it would have to have a lower boost setting and additional attenuation provision.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: GotanewlifeI wouldn't know what slow or fast is - so that 6 or 7W per 1 deg difference per m2
    Upwards the comparative figure would be about 10 W/m²·K. However, remember that that's only the temperature difference between the air and the surface of the floor. There's need for a further temperature gradient to drive heat into the floor so when heat is not flowing or flowing the other way the floor surface would be cooler still.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: Gotanewlifeonly Ringi had a note of caution, no-one has yet said anything negative.

    Sorry, I did say use UFH. i.e. don't use air transfer, IMHO. I probably should have been more explicit.

    I think your friend needs something that puts heat into water rather than into the room (is that a boiler rather than a stove?). I think the slab will work well and even better if beefed up, provided it is heated by UFH and not expected to absorb heat by osmosis from the air. And I think that he'll probably need a water tank as buffer because of control issues with the wood boiler, as well as for DHW. But those are just my opinions and they're not terribly well informed, so they're worth what you paid for them.

    And I think trying to build something different without drawings, especially in an environment where drawings have not normally been used, is a recipe for disappointment. Somebody needs to have a clear head and be sure about what is being built. I'm more sure of that opinion than I am about wood boilers.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeApr 29th 2016
     
    Posted By: Gotanewlifeno solar survey done yet

    I think that is probably quite important. Mainly to see what solar power will be available from the roof but also to get some data about insolation through windows in various directions.
  5.  
    OK OK - I'm going to give up. If it were my house I would fight a good bit more - I really think there might be something in this - but I am not starting from a good point here; I have never even come across 'upwards' and 'downwards' before or even those units so whilst those bits are fairly intuitive (probably), for me to bottom this out is a lot more work than I want for a friend who would take some persuading anyway. Disappointed though - not got a straight answer but I value the wieght of opinion and it is against me. Despite comments like:

    djh - It all still works because the heat is still inside the building and everything evens out (MVHR with heater).
    Cerisy - I do feel it slowly balances the heat around the house (MVHR)

    So - solar survey, drawings,over-size slab, high air tightness is achievable. Ta all
   
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