ᐅ KfW55 calculation with or without including the standard thermal bridge allowance?

Created on: 17 Jul 2021 11:32
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fabianbre
Hello everyone,

we are building a detached house with a gable roof. The house will have brick cladding. Our energy consultant provided two options for a KfW55 house.

Option 1) Thermal bridge allowance 0.05, exterior wall insulation 18 cm (7 inches) with thermal conductivity 0.032 W/(m·K), roof insulation 28 cm (11 inches) with thermal conductivity 0.032 W/(m·K)

Option 2) Thermal bridge allowance calculated individually, exterior wall insulation 18 cm (7 inches) with thermal conductivity 0.035 W/(m·K), roof insulation 24 cm (9 inches) with thermal conductivity 0.035 W/(m·K)

Is it because of the method of calculating the thermal bridge allowance that in option 2 a lower insulation thickness and a higher thermal conductivity can be used, or is there a typo?

Thanks and best regards
fabianbre
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nordanney
20 Jul 2021 09:19
Honestly? Just go with the thicker insulation and enjoy having a better insulated house. The price difference will be marginal (installation costs are the same).
Tolentino20 Jul 2021 11:19
Well, the price for the insulation is definitely much higher (I checked myself two weeks ago), almost a 100% increase. But with this volume, it might only add up to 1000–2000 EUR (approximately 1100–2200 USD), and when you consider the entire house construction, it's basically peanuts.
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nordanney
20 Jul 2021 11:48
Tolentino schrieb:

Well, the price for insulation is definitely much higher (I checked myself two weeks ago), almost a 100% markup.

Someone is trying to rip you off. 18 cm (7 inches) of Neopor with a thermal conductivity of 0.032 W/mK is about 10% more expensive than 18 cm (7 inches) of Neopor with 0.035 W/mK. Then 20 cm (8 inches) with 0.032 W/mK costs another 10% more.
==> current market price (there has actually never been such a big difference before)
Tolentino20 Jul 2021 11:50
Sorry, wrong thread. Wasn't there something similar recently about PUR/PIR with a thermal conductivity of 0.023 W/(m·K)?
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nordanney
20 Jul 2021 12:06
Tolentino schrieb:

Wasn't there something similar recently regarding PUR/PIR with a thermal conductivity value of 0.023 W/(m·K)?
That's right – Smartbau in Nettetal was mentioned. There you can get the 0.023 board for 20% less than the 35 EPS (expanded polystyrene) boards, although it is laminated with aluminum and paper. That's quite impressive. I really like this supplier (or their neighbor, who offers similar prices but also sells different products).