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Home Energy Magazine Online May/June 1998
First Step in Cellulose Sealing: Spot the Style
by Fred Lugano
For a home performance contractor, knowing
the typical problems in each style of house can save time and improve the
quality of your work.
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| Figure 1: One of the most notorious heat loss sites in a colonial
is the space above the stairwell. When hot air convects up into the attic,
it can be replaced by air leaks from below, or by cold attic air descending
from above. |
 |
| Garrison colonials and other homes with cantilevered floors can
suffer extreme air intrusion between stories. This house is being manually
air-sealed. After removing soffit sheathing, the author is blocking the
joist bays and sealing the blocking with expanding foam. |
See the Chimney, Seal the Leak
Internal chimney structures are home performance
failures that can be seen from the street. They are sometimes large enough
to function as room dividers, and can be the biggest open chases in the
house. But most chimneys have open space around them to comply with fire
codes, as no combustibles are allowed within 4 inches of the masonry.
It is possible to follow fire codes and still
air-seal the chimney chase at the attic floor. The trick is to build a
noncombustible sheet metal bridge between the masonry and the ceiling plaster
and seal it to each with high-temperature sealant.

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| In a two-story home like a colonial, recessed lights create a huge
aggregate hole into the attic. Covering IC-rated fixtures with airtight
boxes seals them dependably. Other recessed fixtures cannot be air-sealed
safely. |
 |
| In contemporaries, interior walls often continue up to the roof,
leaving stud bays open at the top. A crew member is air-sealing the tops
of these cavities by stuffing plastic bags full of insulation into the
bays. |
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| The large, hard-to-access attic of a ranch style home is usually
full of surprising, concealed air leaks. Here, an interior wall has leaked
so much air through its unsealed top plate that the attic insulation has
turned brown from dust. It is best to map the interior of a ranch before
attempting to air-seal, in order to know where to look for leaks. |
|
| Figure 2. In ranch-style homes, the valances above kitchen cabinets
often open directly into the attic. Interior walls are rarely sealed when
they enter an attic at such an awkward intersection. The stud bays can
be sealed with bags of insulation or with dense-pack cellulose. |
 |
| Figure 3. The finished half-attic contributes to heat loss in two
ways. It is exposed to outdoor air from roof venting, and it usually allows
indoor air to leak out through unsealed framing. |
|
|
| There are two ways to air-seal and insulate the side-attics around
a finished half-story. On the left, Li Ling Young installs sheathing over
the rafters. The space between the sheathing and the roof deck will soon
be dense-packed to prevent heat loss and air movement. Right, Fred Lugano
solidifies a side-attic, filling the whole space with dense-pack cellulose.
While less time-consuming, solidification makes the side-attics useless
for storage. |
For the last 16 years, I have run a company called
Lake Construction in Vermont. We use cellulose insulation to improve health,
safety, durability, comfort, and energy efficiency in many styles of buildings.
The first step in any of our renovation projects is to look at the holes
in the thermal envelope and the pressures that drive air through them.
What makes this easier is that most of the big holes are inherent in the
style of house. An air sealing and insulation crew can usually get rid
of more leakage by sealing these big, intentional holes than by crawling
around the attic hunting for random leaks.
Ye Olde Colonial
The performance of two-story colonials is dominated
by stack pressure. This is the upward pressure that develops when a mass
of buoyant, warm air is surrounded by cooler air. In a hot-air balloon,
this pressure lifts the gondola off the ground. In a house, the air just
presses against the upstairs ceiling, finding a way out if there is one.
The problems can start below ground: there are
usually large holes through the foundation (as in the case of homes with
stone foundations or below-grade windows). The basement is often connected
to the house by a leaky cellar access door. In this case, the neutral pressure
plane drops, placing the top of the house under very high pressure. This
pressure means that even small holes into the attic, such as wiring penetrations
or the gaps around shrunken partition top plates, blow enough air to heat
the attic and ice the roof. This type of air movement causes many two-story
homes to develop large black patches on fiberglass insulation in both the
basement and the attic. The fiberglass filters out particles as air flows
through.
We block the large foundation leaks, but focus
primarily on the boundary between the attic and the second story. Every
plumbing and wiring penetration and every inch of partition top plate needs
to be traced and air sealed with caulk. We've found that leaks around the
tops of interior walls are so consistent that we now rarely use pressure
from the blower door to guide us. Since the drywall is dimensionally stable,
gaps always form when the top plate lumber dries. The gaps may only be
1/16-inch or 1/8-inch wide, but with high stack pressure, this is enough
to deliver enormous amounts of heat and moisture to the attic. So every
gap gets caulked.
Next Step, Stairways
There is a special problem with the stairwells
in two-story houses. When they are balloon framed from the first floor
to the attic, the wall bays provide large passages through the conditioned
space. When a sloped ceiling is built over the stairs, big problems develop.
In this design, a sloped 2 x 4 ledger is nailed to the inside of the stairwell
to frame the ceiling over the stairs. This leaves a huge wedge-shaped divot
in the attic floor (see Figure 1). However, the interior
walls of the stairwell have no top plates, leaving open air passages from
the heated space into the attic.
To make matters worse, we find fiberglass batts
that have been tented over the void. Air in the divot is then on the attic
side of the pressure boundary, but on the house side of the thermal boundary.
Once warmed, this air can flow through batt insulation into the attic,
to be replaced by cold air.
Cold attic air conducts heat out of the walls.
This shows in condensation on (and degradation of) the surrounding wall
finishes. When the house is heated, any leaks into the walls (for example,
the space around electrical boxes) exhaust enormous amounts of air from
the house.
With such extreme leakage to the attic, windows
draft, flues backdraft, and roofs ice up, regardless of wind conditions
or insulation levels. I've seen three homes where the second floor system
was depressurized--the top sashes were sucking in air without help from
mechanical depressurization--because the neutral pressure plane was somewhere
in the middle of the attic.
So we air seal and insulate the space above the
stairs. If access is available, we can build a new attic floor of wood
framing, applying normal air sealing methods. But for a quick and utterly
reliable air seal, we dense-pack the whole divot. The stairwell is so open
that normal pneumatic dense-packing is impossible, so we compress the cellulose
with our bodies. At 3 lb/ft3, a typical 3-ft-wide stairwell
requires 450 lb of cellulose, which isn't enough to cause structural failure
on the ceiling of the stairway below. (Indeed, the main structural stress
is having workers in the cavity compressing the insulation.)
Garrison Colonials
The Garrison colonial is known for its cantilevered
second-story floor. These same floors show up in many modern contemporaries.
This type of construction exposes interior joists between the first and
second story to the outdoors (see "Moisture Control
in Bathrooms," HE Mar/Apr '98, p. 21). Fortunately, they often
reside near the neutral pressure plane and are thus not subjected to much
infiltration in calm weather. But coupled with balloon framing that is
open at the top, these floors are depressurized, and become conduits through
which large amounts of inside air can get to the attic. Repair requires
air sealing and insulating the ends of the joist bays. There are two methods.
We can remove the cantilever's siding and sheathing and manually air seal
the joist bays with bags of fiberglass or with rigid materials and caulk.
Or, to dense-pack, we can drill holes under the cantilever, over the cantilever,
or through adjacent drywall, and pack the ends of the bays with cellulose.
Wood Stoves
In cold climates, where most colonials are found,
homeowners sometimes install wood stoves to overcome the heat loss from
drafts. At least heat can radiate across the drafts, allowing people to
sit still without wearing a coat or blanket. Due to excessive leakage at
the top of the house, these same homeowners sometimes have to develop tricks
to start a fire. I've seen electric hair dryers, propane torches, and various
petroleum accelerants put into wood stoves to light them when they are
cold. Once heated, wood heaters pull yet more air out of the house, increasing
negative pressures. Even then, some fireplaces backdraft enough that they
are unusable unless windows are open. Backdrafting is a sign of strong
negative pressures around the wood stove. It shows that air is being lost
out the top of the house.
Recessed Cans
Recessed lights are very popular in two-story
houses. When installed upstairs, they create a huge aggregate puncture
into the attic. I've seen over four dozen used in a single house. Fixtures
labeled "fire hazard" cannot be air sealed safely. If homeowners won't
let us replace these fixtures, I do what I can to seal the other gaps in
the house, and hope for the best. Building and installing baffles to keep
insulation away from these fixtures ends up costing more in labor and energy
than just replacing the fixtures with IC-rated ones.
With IC-rated fixtures installed, it is possible
to air seal the attic floor. We seal the fixtures by covering them with
airtight boxes. We build the boxes by screwing five 12-inch squares of
drywall into scrap pieces of steel corner bead. We cut notches to accommodate
wiring and framing, and then seal the whole thing to the ceiling with caulk
and foam.
Contemporary Houses
By their nature, contemporary houses are unusual.
This in itself can lead to thermal defects. When unskilled laborers attempt
challenging architecture, misaligned walls and loose framing joints become
commonplace. These lead to a leaky envelope that house wrap conceals, but
does not air seal. Every framing junction in a building is a source of
some leakage. In dramatic designs where walls are ballooned or floors are
cantilevered, interior wall and floor bays are exposed to outside air.
This leads to large bypasses and intrusions. Even energy-conscious builders
have difficulties with unique homes because they have no relevant insulation
and air sealing patterns to follow.
Contemporaries often have interior walls that
separate living space from attics. Where these open areas butt into the
other rooms with lower ceilings, the interior partitions are framed up
to the roof. This leaves one side of the wall framing exposed to the attic.
Such a wall needs to perform as an exterior wall, blocking the flow of
air and heat. However, the partition wall is rarely blocked at the lower
ceiling plane, and is often uninsulated. In a complicated design, these
critical details are easy to overlook.
These walls destroy thermal comfort by leaking
air to the attic or by convecting heat out of the wall. During winter,
the lower part of the wall is heated from both sides, heating air within
the wall. At the lower ceiling plane, the stud bays are open to the attic,
allowing heated air to rise up and out. If the wall is interrupted by electric
outlets or other penetrations, house air is drawn through them. If there
are no penetrations, dense cold air from the attic falls down the stud
bays to be heated. (This can make a thermostat behave erratically, because
the wall gets colder as the house is heated.)
To air seal and insulate the confusing spaces
at the top of interior walls, we've found that house wrap and dense-pack
cellulose are particularly useful. We hang house wrap over the short attic
walls and other large areas of strange and leaking framing. To secure it
to the framing, we either use wide-crown roofing staples or nails and screws
with lath or cardboard reinforcement. Fasteners should be 12 inches on
center. We then fill the stud and rafter bays with dense-pack cellulose,
delivering insulation and air sealed building joints with a minimum of
expense.
Today, exposed beams across cathedral ceilings
are a popular theme. The sloped ceilings create mighty drafts that suck
huge volumes of air through leaks around the beams. If the air is humidified,
either mechanically or by a saturated foundation, destructive condensation
often occurs in the roof system. The solution is to pack the cathedral
ceiling full of cellulose and turn off the water. "Turning off the water"
can mean sealing the foundation, or at least telling residents not to run
mechanical humidifiers all winter. Once air leakage is reduced, humidification
should be less necessary.
The Ranch Home
In single-story construction, we see the lowest
stack pressures. This means that for every square inch of leakage area,
there is relatively little air flow. The trouble is that every square foot
of living area is exposed to the attic. This offers many more opportunities
for envelope breaches than are present in a two-story of the same floor
area.
Typically, the roofs of these houses are framed
at a 4-in-12 pitch. Getting out to see and fix bypasses and intrusions
at the eaves is difficult. More than with any other type of house, I like
to walk the interior and map the walls, lighting, and likely chases before
entering the attic. The attic is so tight that it's a waste of physical
exertion to hunt for leaks up there.
Each bathroom has a separate plumbing chase leading
to unconditioned space. Ceiling fixtures are almost never sealed, providing
more routes for air flow to the attic. Every linear foot of interior partition
top plate is a potential source of leakage, especially in walls with wall
switches and electrical outlets. Shower surrounds present especially big
leaks--they are intentionally left open to the attic to let moist walls
dry out, but they also let warm air escape all winter long. Chimneys are
potent leakage sites (see "See the Chimney, Seal the Leak").
And kitchens are often open to the attic through valances, exhaust chases,
and built-in cabinetry.
Big divots in the attic floor, such as kitchen
valances and dropped ceilings (see Figure 2), kill
envelope performance in two ways. Wall bays that open into these cavities
draft warm air into the attic (just like the colonial staircase described
above). This air is replaced either from the house or from the attic. Cold
attic air can be drawn down into the wall, or house air can leak into the
bays through electrical openings and around trim.
To add architectural interest, ever more ranch
houses are featuring cathedral ceilings in living rooms and other public
areas. These present the same sort of performance problems found in contemporaries,
although in ranch homes, the ceiling anomalies are generally easier to
see and fix.
Fixing the Ranch
The goal in the ranch is a continuous air seal
at the ceiling plane. Most ranch-style homes have one large, flat ceiling,
so the main problem is just locating and accessing the leaks. After walking
the interior of the house, looking for likely penetrations, we bring a
variety of air sealing materials into the attic, including scraps of drywall,
waxed cardboard, and wood blocking, caulk, expanding foam, and sheet metal.
Where adjacent wall bays open into lighting valances,
there are two possible repairs. It's possible to block the wall framing
at the valance level. Rather than waste time cutting rigid air sealing
material, we air seal the bays by stuffing them with bags of fiberglass
insulation. Alternatively, the entire valance can be dense-packed with
cellulose.
The Finished Half-Attic
One last style of building with inherent problems
is the finished half-attic. This popular design includes bungalows, Cape
Cods, and gambrel houses. Some two-story colonials also have a finished
attic that adds half a floor of living space. The element common to all
of these houses is the side attic (see Figure 3). This
odd triangular space behind kneewalls destroys the performance of these
houses (see "Beauty and the Beast Upstairs,"
HE,
Mar/Apr '95, p. 28).
In a house with vented attics, the finished half-attic
can be surrounded entirely by outdoor air. This conducts heat in during
the summer and out during the winter, to the point that water sometimes
freezes when spilled on the floor of these rooms. The extensive exposure
to outdoor air also causes massive air leakage. Insulation in the sloped
ceilings above the attic often turns black from filtering out particulates
in flowing air. I have found homes where sealing the various attic spaces
reduces total house leakage (measured by blower door) by over 75%.
Generally, the floor of a side attic is unfinished,
consisting of exposed joists and insulation. Some finer old houses have
tongue-and-groove subfloors in the side attics, but these pose little obstruction
to air movement. Thus, the floor under the finished half-story is connected
to the side attic. (Building guides sometimes recommend blocking between
the floor joists where the kneewalls sit on the joists. This is a good
idea that is practically never implemented.) From the side attic, open
rafter bays lead to the top attic. So there is a continuous zone of outdoor
air that includes the floor system, the side attic, and the top attic.
The attic living space is effectively outdoors
for two reasons. First, roof venting is so effective at circulating air
out of the attic that there is a constant flow of outdoor air past the
interior space, bringing the attic's temperature ever closer to outdoor
conditions. Second, the attics usually leak so much (through the backs
of built-in furniture, for example) that the primary pressure barrier becomes
the attic ridge vent.
Fixing the Half-Attic
Fixing these houses is extremely difficult with
normal air sealing methods. Just getting in there can be a challenge. If
residents are using the space for storage, it will be full of belongings,
and unused side attics often have no access. The kneewalls tend to be broken
up by built-in drawers, bookcases, and shelves, to capture some utility
from this otherwise wasted space.
Using traditional air sealing methods, we must
treat about 100 ft2 of house to eliminate 100 square inches
of effective leakage area. Such a project is not usually cost-effective.
But if the side attics are small or unused, it is much simpler to solidify
them completely by packing them with cellulose. This eliminates all the
hand work in what can be hot, confined, dangerous, and filthy places. The
results, unlike conventional air sealing, are extraordinarily reliable
and durable, regardless of complications such as built-in furniture.
To solidify a half-attic, we cover the backs
of the built-in furniture with house wrap, stapled to the framing. To gain
entry, we go through interior walls, through exterior walls, or through
the roof. We check the side attic for bad wiring, unlined chimneys, light
fixtures labeled "fire hazard," disconnected ductwork, roof rot, and dead
animals. We then pack the side attics with cellulose at 3.5 lb/ft3,
eliminating all attic venting. We treat the top attic conventionally, by
air sealing manually and blowing with cellulose. We have found that by
blocking off all air movement between the living space and the attic, we
can get rid of moisture problems. We guarantee our work, and have yet to
have any problems from structural failure or moisture diffusion through
the cellulose. Most importantly, we have found that residents are far more
comfortable.
In order to preserve side attics, we sheath the
rafters with oriented strand board and dense-pack the rafter bays. This
is easiest to do from above. If there is no hatch, we gain access to the
top attic, either through exterior walls, through the roof, or through
gable vents. For uninsulated slopes, we push a 2-inch hose down the rafter
bays all the way to the floor. If there is existing batt insulation in
the sloped ceiling, we slide a 1-inch hose past the existing insulation.
Either way, we blow in cellulose at 3.5 lb/ft3. When we are
done, the soffits and rafter bays are packed tight, and any batt insulation
in the slopes is crushed flat against the sloped ceiling.
Fred Lugano is a builder and home performance
contractor in Vermont.
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