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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Are Your New Windows Sustainable?

Posted by: Ken Mariotti

Windmills in the back yard, rain barrels under gutters, and concrete front lawns, it’s looking like more homeowners are joining the sustainability movement. Sometimes these obvious efforts to do the right thing can seem extreme. When it comes to home building or remodeling, sustainability starts by critically thinking about how windows affect a home’s overall climate.

Windows typically comprise 10-25% of a home’s exterior wall area, and in a climate like ours, they can account for 35-50% of the heating and cooling needs of the home.

When you’re ready to remodel or build a new home talk to architects and builders who understand sustainable design and enlist them to help you create a three step balanced approach to sustainability.

            Step One: Start with Design Principles

            Step Two: Select High Performance Windows

            Step Three: Build with Integrity

Design Principles
Marvin Windows
A good architect or designer will focus on your thermal comfort, in our case, living in an extreme climate. A good design reduces the need for heating and air conditioning and uses construction materials, especially windows that help balance the thermal load. In other words, flooring, ceilings, window sizes and framing materials, shading and other choices interact in ways that lower thermal loads. The goal is for your home to require less heating and cooling to maintain comfortable conditions.

Designers who understand these principles will choose designs and products that are best suited for your home. They will orient windows so as to optimize light and the warmth, while neutralizing the suns overall affect on your home’s temperature. For example, sparingly place windows on the east and west facades, and maximize the window placement on the south side of your home. The design will provide natural ventilation by strategically placing windows on both sides of the house to create cross-ventilation or layouts, like ceiling level hoppers that capture cooling breezes in the summer.

High Performance Windows
Marvin Windows for Ventilation
Advances in window technology, such as double pane and low-e coatings, substantially reduce heat loss and control heat gain. The performance contrast between new windows and the original single glass panes that you may have in your old home is drastic. Imagine that all these years, all you had separating you from the Chicago winter was a single pane of quarter-inch glass. Whether you choose wood, fiberglass, vinyl or aluminum, modern window frame conductivity outperforms anything you’ve known before.

Consult the standardized ratings for Solar heat gain coefficients (SHGC) and U-values provided by the NationalFenestration Rating Council (NFRC) and Energy Star Labels, but remember that while ratings are important, they shouldn’t be the driving factor for the window choices. Features like thermal performance can add to condensation problems for instance, so that interior humidity and climate also need to be considered. Don’t rely on one value over all others; rather take the entire balanced design into consideration when choosing new windows.

Build Smart
Marvin Upper Transoms
The success of your design and product choices relies on building and installation techniques. High performance windows need to be installed according to the manufacturer’s instructions so as not to diminish the energy performance, not to mention, damage the window unit or surrounding walls. Homeowners should expect the builder to follow key guidelines to the highest standards.

  • Meet all codes
  • Properly size rough opening allowing for expansion and movement
  • Install window unit level, plumb, and square
  • Maintain the continuity of the weather-resistant barrier
  • Insulate all voids between the window and wall with expanding foam (minimum rate)
  • Maintain the integrity of air and vapor retarders
  • Only apply caulks and sealants that are compatible with the substrate

The best measure of sustainability is building something right the first time.

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