8 Tips to Make Your Remodel More Energy Efficient and Your Home Healthier
- Published: October 18, 2012
As long as you’re remodeling, why not cut your utility bill and make your home a bit health
Saving energy
wasn’t on the list of reasons we’re finally ripping out the kitchen in our
mid-century home (green-veined, imitation marble laminate countertops
figured much more prominently). But, a session at the recent 2012 Remodeling
Show in Baltimore clued me in as to why adding a few simple tasks to our remodeling
plan could lower our home’s energy
bill, get rid of some of the annoying hot and cold spots in our house, and
make our home less hospitable to mold
and other allergens.
Carl
Seville, author of Green Building: Principles and Practices in
Residential Construction, shared some simple, inexpensive ways to make
remodels and additions more energy efficient from the standpoint of energy
usage and conservation of resources.
Try these eight tips from Seville:
1. Check for
water intrusion, condensation, and excess moisture before you begin the
project. Fixing those issues during remodeling can improve your home’s
indoor air quality
(excess moisture encourages mold).
2. Use the least
amount of framing allowed by your building code when adding walls. Not
only will you have to pay for less lumber and fewer nails, the contractor will
have more room to put insulation
in your walls, making your home more energy efficient.
3. Resist the
urge to splurge on multiple shower heads. Opt for a single low-flow
shower head rather than installing a car wash-style plethora of shower
heads.
4. If possible, add new HVAC ducts to parts of
your home that are heated and cooled, rather than placing them in a
space with unconditioned air (like the attic). If that’s not possible, insulate
the ducts. Have an HVAC diagnostician analyze your system to make sure it’s
sized correctly and balanced to properly exchange old and new air.
5. Be sure to insulate around recessed
lights that protrude into un-insulated
attic spaces — these are major sources of air
leaks.
6. If you’re wasting water,
you’re wasting energy. Look at high-efficiency or solar water
heaters, and insulate your water pipes. If you want hot water faster, move
the water heater closer to the faucet or install demand pumps to drive hot water
to the fixture.
7. Install wall-mounted efficiency toggle switch plates for
the outlets where you plug in your televisions and computers to make it easy to
cut off the power to electronics you’re not using.
8. A humidistat that automatically turns on
the bathroom
fan when moisture rises beats depending on teenagers or tenants
remembering to use the fan. Reducing bathroom moisture reduces the chances
you’ll have mold.
When I pull the kitchen
cabinets off the wall, I’m going to use caulk to seal between the wallboards
and the floorboards before I put down new flooring and install
the new cabinets. And since I’ll have the caulk out, I’m going to seal the top
of window trim, something my home’s builder didn’t do.
What are your tips for smart energy savings during a
remodel?Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/blog/green-remodeling/how-to-make-your-remodel-more-energy-efficient/#ixzz2A4tqGD9s
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