The frames are up! I am sure I join a chorus of builders wives when I say that your own home is always at the bottom of the list of priorities amongst all the other projects. Nevertheless we have made progress and it has been very exciting to see the walls of the house being built. The external wall frames are 140mm thick versus the standard 90mm studs used on most homes, this meant that the frames were built onsite rather than pre-fabricated. We need the frames to be this thick to fit all the insulation required later down the track. We are also only building the external walls at this stage, this is so that when we come to the internal wrap we will have no wall junctions to navigate. I will explain this further when we are up-to that stage. Next, the roof trusses were installed, these were pre-frabricated and therefore nice and quick to put together. Now onto our weather tight wrap, which is the first step in making a sealed building envelope. In my mind the way I like to think about the building envelope is to equate it to clothing we would wear. So working from the outside-in the weather tight wrap is like a raincoat/wind breaker. The insulation is the warm down jacket and the internal air tight wrap are the thermals. We are effectively creating what I call a house onesie, but I will explain more about the thermal envelope in future blogs. In the below cross-section you can see that the weather tight wrap is the green dotted line. On the roof trusses we used Pro-Clima Solitex Mento. As you can see from the photos this was installed on the external side of the roof trusses, all the joins in the wrap are taped then timber battens were fixed onto the trusses for the colourbond roof to be layed. We have begun wrapping the external walls of the house. In a similar fashion to the roof, the walls are also wrapped in Pro-Clima Solitex Extasana with all the joins taped. On this wrap we have started to install all the battens for the weatherboards and pine lining for the eaves will be fixed onto. The battens play a two part role, firstly so the weatherboards can be fixed to them, to keep puncturing the wrap to a minimum. Secondly it is going to act as a 35mm service cavity for things such as electrical and plumbing needs (i.e. electrical cable, hot and cold water supply, green recycled water supply from the water tanks and cable needed for the electrical solar system). The service cavity is there so we are not taking up space in the wall frames with these services and to keep the wall insulation consistent. You can see in the photos how the black wrap that is under the floor, has come up over the floor joists to overlap the wall wrap. At this stage we have also gone straight over most of the window openings with the wrap, this is so we can cut it back later and make sure there is enough wrap to tape correctly to the windows. Devin has promised me that our house will be moving up the priority list now so I will be able to post new blogs very soon!
4 Comments
Cheryl
2/5/2017 02:15:12 pm
Thanks so much for your blog. I am interested in why you chose to build the 140mm deep wall frames rather than the standard 90mm frame construction with additional insulation provided by XPS insulation on ouside of the wrap? This method has been recommended to us. The timber frame is entirely within the thermal envelope. The airtight vapour membrane is located between the frame and the insulation (on the outside). Better XPS external insulation allows the usual fibreglass insulation between the studs to be eliminated. This in turn allows the battens creating a service void to be ommitted. The services run within the frame with the plasterboard adhesive fixed to the studs as normal.
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Justin
5/5/2017 06:07:51 pm
Hi Cheryl,
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Devin Grant
9/5/2017 02:00:18 pm
Hi Cheryl, glad you are enjoying the blog.
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Cheryl
15/6/2017 06:24:34 am
Thanks Devin, Look forward to chatting with you on Friday 16th June at the Passive House Open Day. Leave a Reply. |
Who we areDevin & Suzanne are building a family home using a Passive House method. Categories
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