Author: Chris

All Electric

In our past homes, natural gas provided fuel for heating the home, hot water, and much of the cooking.  In the Sweet Tree Passive House, there is no connection to the gas main.  It is an all-electric house.

Gas is a complication in a tightly-sealed house such as a Passive House.  Combustion requires exhausting the combustion products, as well as bringing fresh air in to replace that lost out the chimney.  Getting that make-up air to the flame location without chilling your home in winter can be challenging.  You’ve just put 2 holes through your weather envelope just to manage burning gas.

Our Passive House stays comfortably warm most the year, with little additional energy input beyond sunlight and day-to-day living, plus the small energy used to constantly circulate fresh air through the heat exchanger.  Our heat exchanger will also have a ground loop of about 300 feet of glycol, which should add or subtract a few degrees, depending on the season.  Still, there will always be some days when it’s cold enough and cloudy/snowy enough (or just dark enough right round the winter solstice in December) where the sun won’t be enough.  Using some backup heat generated by electricity shouldn’t be a problem, nor ruin our ecological footprint.

For cooking, we have an induction cooktop, and electric oven and microwave.  The induction cooktop is actually more efficient than gas and faster, as well.  People love gas for its quick heat, finely controllable heat range and ability to easily generate high heat.  Induction is able to do that quite well, it turns out.  And there’s the benefit of the smooth, seamless glass surface, easily cleaned.  No more cooked-on spills of gas burners.  We actually chose induction before learning that it was better than gas.

A perhaps more significant change is using electric for domestic hot water, instead of gas.  We use an air-to-water heat pump.  Because it’s much more efficient to move heat than to create it, it turns out that a heat pump water heater is roughly 3 times more energy efficient than a gas heater.  There’s no chimney up which a large portion of your heat disappears with gas — the best gas heaters are about 60% efficient, wasting 40% of the gas-produced heat.  However, gas can produce more BTUs of heat per hour, and that means gas water heaters have a much faster recovery time.  We have a larger volume tank, and we need to be cognizant of not using up all the hot water and expecting to have more in just an hour.  We have not ever run out of hot water in 2+ years, and in fact, we’ve barely thought about it.

We can live with these small changes, in return for the benefits of a lower energy bill and not having gas in the house at all.  And because we’ve lived near 3 different homes which exploded due to gas leaks, we also reflect on the benefits of non-exploding homes, as well as lower indoor pollution from time to time.

Que Pasa – Passive House?

What is a Passive House and why did we choose it?                 19274923_423632261351954_682332954014530840_n

We did not set out to build a Passive House.  After years of looking for ways to improve upon standard construction, owning and renovating several homes from new to 100+ years old we learned about Passive Houses.  We spoke with experts, visited a few examples, then decided to proceed.

  • Passive House (capital P, capital H) is a building standard.
    Originating in Germany in about 1988, it is a construction concept that can be applied by anyone and has stood the test of time.  Passive House standards have design and construction techniques for insulating, strategic placement of special windows & shades, and ventilation for year-round comfort and minimal costs.
  • Passive Houses are comfortable places to live and work.
    Interior walls and floors stay much closer to indoor air temperature than in a traditional home — no cold feet or drafts in the winter.  Construction techniques retain heat during winter, and keep it out during summer, so temperatures stay pleasant.  A  ventilation system continuously supplies fresh air, making for superior air quality without causing unpleasant drafts.
  • Passive Houses are energy-efficient.
    With heating and cooling energy savings up to 90%, compared with current building code, Passive Houses have a light touch on the environment.  Very high R-value windows are strategically placed for maximum heat gain in cold weather, minimum in warm.  Energy from inside the building (such as body heat, or solar heat through windows) is retained by high-performance insulation, so less heating is required.  A high-efficiency heat recovery unit captures heat from exhaust-air in winter, and coolness in summer.
    Passive Houses are affordable.                                                 piggy_bank_8881
    All of these advantages come at a cost roughly 10% to 15% more than a code-built house on first day of ownership*.  Energy savings over the life of the house will more than pay for those extra costs.

Here are some online resources for learning more about the Passive House standard and how buildings make use of it to improve their performance.

 

*For homes built to current building code in most cities in the USA.  We’ve read that for a home built to the more stringent regulations in Ireland, for example, Passive House is the same price or an even less expensive way to meet the energy standards in their building laws than conventional techniques.

Rapid Progress

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Plumbing in, ready for thin-set concrete

Things are progressing rapidly this week.  Our builder Ryan Stegora is definitely not letting any grass grow under his feet.

Yesterday, Ryan and his crew poured the foundation footings for the garage and breezeway, as well as a thin-set layer of concrete on the sand below the basement to provide a nice flat surface for the insulation.

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Thin-set concrete going in

 

 

 

Today, they got the foam insulation built on top of the thin-set, and started the outside wall insulation, as well as framed up the forms to hold it all together when the single-sided ICF forms and concrete get started.

 

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Installing insulation below basement floor

 

How it looked at the end of the day — sort of like a large shallow swimming pool.

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Sub-floor insulation for basement, looking west.