T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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395.1 | ooops | CADSE::SANCLEMENTE | | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:27 | 14 |
|
re: .1
I am sorry, I just reread my base note and it's not clear what I
really want to do.
I am looking into converting a cottage from 3 season use to 4 season
use. My major concerns are the pipes under the cottage. Is there
a fairly economical way to keep them from freezing in the winter?
Will a full foundation be required? Also the general insulating
and heating of the entire house and the costs.
sorry about that A.J.
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395.2 | write answer, wrong note | FDCV14::DUNN | Karen Dunn 223-2651 | Mon Nov 07 1988 10:49 | 9 |
|
re .1
This may not be the question this base author was asking, but
the winterizing converstaion is taking place in another very recent note.
Maybe the moderator could move it, as it is wonderful winterizing
advice.
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395.3 | Different Answer | WAV14::COLVIN | | Wed Nov 09 1988 08:41 | 59 |
| Well, what can I say? Having recently finished helping my father
with this year's cottage closing I guess this was my first reaction
to the term "winterizing". Actually I also have experience with
the other "winterizing" process since about 8 years ago they did
this to the cottage with the intention of retiring there (they
since decided Florida was a better idea which is why the cottage
is now closed-up).
Anyway, they did spend two winters there and this is how they prepared
what had strictly been a summer cottage.
1 - They insulated floors, walls , and attic (low pitch roof crawl
space). The interior is knotty-pine T&G vertical boards. These were
removed, roll fiberglass insulation installed (Kraft-faced) and
pine re-installed. Fiberglass batts were layed in ceiling joists in
attic. Two-inch rigid foam was installed from below between floor
joists.
2 - Three foot-high partition walls were built under the cottage
to enclose the areas where water supply pipes ran. These walls were
made of pressure-treated 2X4's, 24 inches O.C. and 1/2 inch plywood.
They extended from ground to floor joists. They were insulated with
two-inch rigid foam. These walls basically created a "Y" shaped
crawl space under the cottage, with each leg about 3 feet wide between
the two walls forming the "Y". The base of the "Y" started under
kitchen, where well pipe entered, and reached out to the two bathrooms
on either side of cottage. Two thermostatically-controlled electric
space heaters were placed inside the partitions at two different
points to heat the plumbing areas under cottage.
3 - A "skirt" was built out of homasote strips between cottage
sidewalls and ground to prevent wind from passing under cottage
(cottage is 30 feet from Lake Champlain).
4 - A propane-fired, forced hot air, horizontal stack wall furnace
was installed in living room (largest room in cottage). Propane
was already present for cooking. Electric baseboard heat was installed
in each of three bedrooms, and each of two bathrooms. Each room
had own thermostat. There was also an existing, free-standing steel
fireplace in living room. Kitchen was open to living room and got
heat from that as well as cooking stove when in use. A small recessed
electric heater was put beside exterior door in kitchen, but was
not needed.
This set-up worked great for two winters, before they decided that
Florida was a better idea. Despite all the electric heat it was
not too expensive since fireplace and gas furnace heated most of
living area.
I think you have to decide how much you would use cottage in winter
and how much ease of startup/shutdown is worth to you. The more
you spend to make it more like a house (foundation, central heat,
etc) the easier it will be to arrive at and leave, but the more
you will spend.
Hope this is more what you are looking for.
Regards-
Larry
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395.4 | | CADSE::SANCLEMENTE | | Wed Nov 09 1988 09:42 | 9 |
|
re: .4
Thanks Larry, you gave me the answers I was looking
for. My major concern was the pipes under the house and the need
for a foundation.
- A.J.
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395.5 | | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:44 | 6 |
| BTW, if you do have a foundation (mine's concrete with a dirt floor),
it seems to do the trick without any help. I have no insulation
anywhere and nothing freezes.
(Actually I'm not 100% sure WHY it's OK)
|
395.6 | 3-season -> year-round conversion | TUXEDO::WRAY | John Wray, Distributed Processing Engineering | Wed Oct 05 1994 10:21 | 10 |
| Our house has a "three-season porch" attached outside the original back
door. We'd like to heat it so we can use it year round.
The walls are insulated up to the level of the false ceiling, but above
that, there's no insulation. If we were to insulate the tops of the
walls and the roof, and put in some sort of heat, what ventilation
would we need to provide? Are there any problems with converting a
porch like this to year-round use?
John
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395.7 | Porch Remodel Help for This Old House | MAIL1::RHODES | | Tue Nov 08 1994 14:09 | 26 |
| Along the same lines as the main noter... I have a 10' x 12' foot
inclosed porch off the kitchen. My wife would like ME to expand the
kitchen into this space, creating an eat in kitchen and a 1/2 bath. My
questions are as follows;
1. The walls are 5.5" deep.. Iwould like to put 3.5" batt
insullation in the cavities along with rigded foam. Which should be
placed first/last with the vapor barrier in mind?
2. The porch is on Cement block footings, about 2' off the ground.
the footings are at the front of the porch 9' from the house which it
is also tied into. The porch over the 10' spain has a 1-2" drop. Could
this be leveled by sistering lumber to the floor joist and be within
code?
3. Since there is no heat in the space and the water supply for
the bath would be run in the crawl space, can you provide ideas as to
how to keep them from freezing. I am in NJ and although the winters are
not as bad as in the New England states we do have consistant freezing
in the months of Jan, Feb and Mar.
All your thoughts and ideas are greatly appreciated.
Regards;
Doug
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395.8 | | LEZAH::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Wed Nov 09 1994 07:27 | 6 |
| Re: .1
In answer to your first question: the fiberglass would go in first
(it might as well be unfaced), followed by the foam, which will
act as a vapor barrier. Personally, I'd put a sheet of poly over
everything afterwards.
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395.9 | Just use fiberglass and do the foundation right. | WMOIS::ECMO::SANTORO | Greg Santoro | Thu Nov 17 1994 13:24 | 24 |
| Is there a reason for the rigid foam? i.e. are the walls studded with 2x6s
at 16 or 24 inch centers? If so, why not use standard R19
kraft-faced fiberglass? The foam seems to only add expense and extra
installation time.
Also, if you plan to get a building permit for this you may have a problem
with leaving your crawlspace "open". Code here in MA generally requires a
floor over grade to be insulated to R21...or the "sides" of the crawl space
to be insulated to R12 with the foundation walls running 4' below grade.
Frankly if you are going to the expense and trouble to make this into a
permanent part of the house, I don't think I'd trust the foundation to a
couple of cinderblocks that are wedged to level...it'll never last, and
again, it probably will not pass inspection.
Why not jack it up and lay in a true cinderblock and mortar foundation.
Insulate the interior walls with rigid form and the floor joints with
fiberglass. The pipes can then run into the crawlspace and up into the
addition. Wrap the pipes in foam and you should be ok.
Best thing would be to call a contractor and ask them what they would do.
They can point out the code issues and give you ideas on what to
do..whether you actually use them or not, you'll get valuable information.
-Greg
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