Energy Efficiency with Insulation

When you are trying to achieve better energy efficiency in your home, there are many ways to do this.  Many homeowners do a process of adding a programmable thermostat, compact fluorescent bulbs, water shower heads that slow water flow, turn down water heaters, add window coverings with insulation properties, or even remove the dryer from the home.  But most people forget about adding insulation when they are looking to improve energy efficiency.

Find a better Energy Efficiency Plan

Energy Efficiency House Plan

No better way to build your home energy efficient than by adding a great layer of insulation in the attic, walls and foundation of your home.  It will protect your home from the wind, rain and moisture of the surrounding areas, and become a buffer for your home.  Insulation is rated up to 100, and comes with great purpose to create a cost savings on many parts of your utility bills, and energy consumption.  It makes no sense to buy new windows, a  new energy efficient furnace, or even seal your home from drafts, when the major parts of your home are not insulated.  Most builders recommend at least an R value of 50, and I believe going above this value is even more important.

Energy Efficiency Begins with Insulation

The walls, attic and foundation are the largest parts of your home, and support your home to create an interior environment that will offer a buffer from the outside weather and extremes of your climate.  No matter where you are, it is very important to blanket or insulate your interior environment from the outside.  When you add insulation to your home, you are encouraging all the other cost initiatives you may try to utilize to work better.  The best course of action, is to use spray foam, with a mix of cellulose insulation in certain areas, to create this blanket and buffer from the outside elements.

Why would you buy an expensive energy efficient furnace, when it only works to heat efficiently, to have the heat only escape each time it works?  The right answer is insulation, and the kind of insulation that will bring great energy efficiency to your home.

 

Long Term Energy Efficiency

Adding insulation to your home or garage is a great way to increase energy efficiency.  Simple changes to adding extra insulation around windows, doors and any plumbing or utility areas will always cost the homeowner at least $100, but without full insulation, the cost savings will not be there.  Energy costs will only continue to grow, as our resources and natural gas stores become more scarce.  With a properly insulated wall and attic built home, a wood furnace can efficiently heat that home with nothing more than a few cords of wood a month.   The cooler homes are as well, insulated from the heat and humidity.  If you are worried about mold, insulation is the right answer as well.

Energy efficiency begins with a plan, and insulation is the right way to start.

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Attic Insulation

Attic Insulation is Our First Step

If your home is new, or existing, you need to consider the most forgotten part of a home construction or renovation project-your attic insulation!  Today we are very lucky, as we can completely tighten and seal our homes with a great ecological material: FOAM!  The home can be a new construction, but even better, you can get foam added to existing homes, with minimal installation costs and disruption.   Adding foam will seal and find all the leaks, air pockets, and crevices that ordinary fiberglass insulation will miss.  It is not going to create a vapor barrier problem, mold problem or issue with your existing walls on the interior of your home, as it is the vapor barrier, and the mold barrier.  All electrical, computer wiring, plumbing and other utility coursing through your home will be unaffected by the soft blanket of foam that will fill the voids in your walls and attic insulation.

 

Attic Insulation

Foam for your Attic Insulation

Foam insulation in the Attic will not work the best, as it needs to be the buffer or blanket from the warm/cold areas of your home, and create a good insulation for your roof. Cellulose works best to create this blanket on the floor of your attic.  If you have a new construction in your home, and the ceiling goes right to the roof, like the picture above,  you will be able to use foam to insulate.  Most cold weather locations, have the attic buffer, as the difference in temperatures is very large.   Whether hot out or cold outside, the key is to keep the attic the same temperature as the roof, and keep the heat in the home, or cold air conditioning in the home.  The fact is, that home construction relies on keeping pressure the same outside and inside the home, and keeping a buffer between wind and changes on the outside of the home.

Add more of a blanket to the floor of your attic, and seal all the ceiling areas in your home, you should find that all will be better for your roof line.  All light fixtures, in the ceiling, can be a leak of heat into the attic, creating a temperature that is closer to the living areas of the home, which is less than ideal.  Adding a seal with foam, or weather stripping around ceiling light areas, skylights, or any roof penetrations, will enable all insulation to work better, and will save you money.

Attic Insulation will Save you Money

Add attic insulation and you will save around 25% of your energy costs, whether through heating and or cooling costs.  Imagine, if you spend around $1500 to add some insulation to your attic, you will get that money back in around 2 years.  The savings to your $3000 a year heating and cooling costs per year would be around $750 a year!  What would you be able to do with that amount each year?  The savings will be even more when you consider that your home will not be damaged by ice dams on your roof, your furnace and air conditioner will work less, and you will be able to be less reliant on energy costs as the costs rise.  Attic insulation is the best way to save money, and you can count on 25% of your heating and cooling costs to drop from your bottom line.

 

 

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