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Habitat for Humanity helps the environment while helping
families in need.
Gray ‘Habitat’ house is ‘green’
By Frank Slater, KP News
One of two new Habitat for Humanity
houses at Palmer Lake is being built to be energy
efficient. The Russell Family Foundation gave a $10,000
grant to help fund this project, with the provision that
it be “green.”
The centerpiece of this effort is a
Wirsbo radiant heating system. The heating unit is a
propane-fired demand water heater, which also provides hot
water for household use. It turns on when a hot water
faucet is opened, or the house temperature falls below the
thermostat setting. There is no hot water tank to cool off
between times of demand.
The hot water is circulated by pumps
through a manifold that regulates its flow, so rooms with
higher demand get more heat. The water is carried through
tubes fastened to the bottom of the subfloor.
Each joist pocket has its own loop of
tubing. When this is in place, insulation is put in below
it to keep the heat against the subfloor. The subfloor is
the agent that carries the heat into the house.
Bob Delaney, chairman of volunteers
for the Gig Harbor/Key Peninsula Chapter of Habitat for
Humanity, said the initial cost of this type of
installation is generally higher because of the labor
required to install the tubing in each joist pocket. The
cost would be offset by lower costs for energy. In this
case, the costs were about the same because he has
volunteer labor to do the installation. Delaney said his
understanding is it would take about two years for lower
energy costs to pay for the additional labor.
Joe Purdue, the plumber on site,
estimated less than 100 watts of power are needed to
circulate the water. This is about what it takes to
operate one ordinary light bulb. The main amount of energy
required is provided by propane, and any small generator
should be adequate to operate the system in case of a
power outage.
Purdue pointed out that with radiant
heat there were only a few degrees difference between the
temperature of the air at the floor and at the ceiling
while with forced-air heating there might be a difference
of as much as 30 degrees. He also noted that a large
closet the plan called for as a mechanical room had been
converted to a general-purpose closet, and a much smaller
closet was to house the heating pumps and controls. This
is an important consideration in a house this size.
The plan calls for, 15 to 16 inches
of R-38 insulation to be blown into the attic, R-21 in the
walls and the floor. The windows are insulated and have an
area of less than one-seventh of the floor space. Even the
shape of the house is energy efficient. It is 32-feet
square with an area of 1,024 square feet. A rectangular
house, 24 feet by 40 feet, would have the same amount of
outside wall to heat but have an area of only 960 square
feet, or about 8 percent less floor space.
Delaney said each house is planned
individually. He does not know if future houses on the Key
Peninsula will follow this energy efficient pattern.
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