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Home Energy Magazine Online March/April 1998
TRENDS
'Affordable' Quality
 |
| Cathy Muller of the National Center for Appropriate Technology explains
how to use a flue-gas analyzer during the Affordable Comfort West field
training. |
 |
| At this structure on the Affordable Comfort West job site, Tim Locke
(left) of Quality Assured Comfort in Fair Oaks, California discusses troublesome
insulation with a conference attendee. Notice the gaping batts (right). |
Promoters of whole-house diagnostics and construction
have always puzzled over one question: how can you get subcontractors with
expertise in various areas to work together, ensuring that the various
systems they are responsible for (insulation, framing, HVAC, windows) work
with all the other systems in a house? Answer: Put 'em all in a big room
with a few whole-house experts and get 'em to talk to each other.
Affordable Comfort West, held at two locations
in Northern and Southern California last November, brought together air
conditioning contractors, ventilation contractors, insulation installers,
architects, and general contractors for two days of discussion and field
study. Trainings were sponsored primarily by the California Energy Commission,
the U.S. Department of Energy, and major California utilities.
John Tooley of Advanced Energy in Raleigh, North
Carolina, started off the Sacramento training at the Sacramento Municipal
Utility District's Energy and Technology Center by asking for the members
of each trade to stand up as their profession was called. He got all the
way from HVAC contractors through general contractors, plumbers, electricians,
architects, lighting designers, energy auditors, insulation contractors,
educators, and policymakers without finding a trade with no one in attendance.
"I'm trying to find out who we can make fun of," Tooley said. "Are there
any lawyers in the room?" Jackpot.
Framers got to hear the gripes of duct installers,
who complained of having to install duct runs around complicated framing
structures. Insulation installers were shown how one missed frame cavity
exposed the whole building envelope to the outdoors. Architects saw how
their designs created problems for almost all of the job site subcontractors.
General contractors discussed how, in a labor-short market, they can train
and keep crews from job to job, and overcome communication problems on
the job site.
Affordable Comfort Incorporated is a nonprofit
educational organization based in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. By coordinating
this effort of communication among the trades, the group hopes to further
its overall goal of promoting high-quality construction and resource efficiency.
Linda
Wigington of Affordable Comfort says that the West Coast training, particularly
in Northern California, had a better turnout than expected. "We were really
pleased," she said. "It's hard to get those people to a conference. For
someone who is self-employed, taking two days off and paying for training
is very difficult." Wigington said that this kind of training is also unusual
for contractors. "Most of the training that contractors attend is very
specific. Many times it's free training offered by a supplier. By its nature,
dealing with interactions is not specific."
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