Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Penny Red: Panic on the streets of London.

An interesting piece of work by a bright young journalist

Penny Red: Panic on the streets of London.

These guys seem to have some new ideas about helping communities

http://spacehive.com/Blog/Details/5

Saturday, 6 August 2011

Garden Office and Garden Studio Insulation

Insulation of Garden Studios and Offices (An important topic)


By Richard Grace Project Director Garden Structures http://www.aarco.co.uk/

It’s always been on the agenda but never more so than now. When our clients are investing their hard earned cash in a work building (Garden Office or Garden Studio) at home they always want to know:
a)     “Will it be warm and comfortable?”
b)     “Will my things be dry and protected in bad weather?”
c)      “Will it cost me a small fortune to heat?”
d)     “Will it become too hot on our best days?”

The answer is “yes if the building has a watertight roof and you control the temperature” but - it will cost more for this control without insulation. All the information I sought in preparation for this article about the importance of insulation in a single storey building reveals the following: (I guess you already know)


1.     Heat rises leaving cold air at the lowest level in a structure.
2.     Air movement in a structure tries to equalize the temperature inside and       outside.
3.     Some materials provide better resistance to temperature transfer than others.
4.     Return on investment on structural components varies


This table indicates the importance of each part of a single storey structure
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Roof
The most vital investment associated with loss of 40% heat on cold days and responsible for 80% of overheating on hot sunny days
Walls
Important should be draught and condensation free + provide adequate resistance to heat transfer in and out typically 25% of heat loss
Windows
Vital without good draught sealing and double glazing allow draughts and can lead to condensation even then responsible for 15% of heat loss
Doors
Vital (the same as windows) but need to be in constant use + resist draughts and condensation another 12% of heat input gone
Floor
Some heat is lost if floor is highly conductive and in direct contact with ground e.g. concrete exposed or single skin wood fixed to exterior beams 8% is going here
The above is my analysis data drawn from multiple professional sources and reflects the relative importance to internal comfort level of each part of the structure. You can see from this table that the ideal structure would have no draughts, a flat (highly insulated) roof at about 2.2m height, walls which are thicker at the top than the bottom and less windows than most people want. As previously stated I think we already knew this.
 

Some experience

Over the years Noella and I have lived - in a cottage in Derbyshire with stone walls two feet thick, an old chapel converted, three modern style houses of different specification, have been on holiday in a caravan, tent +++ more hotels than can be remembered. We have been overheated in a tent, frozen stiff and damp in an UN-insulated attic flat and superbly comfortable in a single skin wooden cabin we had as a showroom for six years.
If we all had an unlimited budget to build a garden office today we would both choose Structural Insulated panels with Solarflex (brand) folding doors and windows. This specification is probably the best available and with minimal heating or cooling provides a superb comfortable environment at the lowest energy cost.
At the other end of the scale a thin drafty single skin wall with drafty windows and no roof insulation would be uncomfortable on 250 days out of 365 in our climate and require expenditure of at least £300 per year to control it. (This is an ordinary garden shed)
So - let us look at another table comparing the three most common Garden Office and Garden Studio construction techniques with specifications that meet the essential criteria for Garden Offices here in the UK.



Comfortable all year round
Save some further cost on energy
Superb Specification
Roof
Flat roof with 70mm of dense insulation
Upgrade to 150mm
SIPS
Walls
65mm of single skin pine wood
Double skin with 50mm dense insulation
SIPS
Windows
Sealed double glazed windows 10mm gap
15mm gap in double glazing with seals
Triple Glazing
Doors
Same spec as windows
Same spec as windows
Triple Glazing
Floor
Two layers with some insulation
40mm dense insulation
SIPS
Cost per sq m installed project
£700
£900
£1100


3m*4m Office Total Project inc VAT
£8400
£10800
£13200

We are asked about electrical systems, security, maintenance etc.on each and every client site-visit. All of the answers are simple but the explanation of insulation importance and ROI remains the hot (in more than one way) topic of the day.


Richard Checked May 2017  richardgrace1@gmail.com

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Richard is an experienced business consultant specialising in garden structures design and planning + The UK's leading expert in using Pinterest for business marketing web traffic generation at lowest cost.