ᐅ Creating a Plan for Insulating an Old Building – How to Proceed?

Created on: 30 Aug 2022 10:30
T
Tobibi
Hello,

I’m currently trying to make a plan for how to best improve the insulation of our house. I hope I can write everything down clearly so that some of you might be able to give me tips or suggest different approaches.

We bought a large house from 1982, about 200 sqm (2,150 sq ft) of living space. There is an approximately 6-year-old heat pump for heating and hot water, and a small wood stove in the living room. The ground floor and first floor have underfloor heating, while three basement rooms and a converted room above the garage have radiators. These radiators have a separate heating circuit with their own flow temperature and are rarely used, actually not at all in the basement.

In the main bedroom on the first floor, the previous owner opened the ceiling a few years ago, creating a high space that goes up to the roof ridge. The roof was insulated at that time, but I don’t have any documentation on how well. The rest of the house remains in its original condition, so basically uninsulated.

The walls are solid brick. The wooden windows have double glazing. Many windows and the front door do not seal well, allowing noticeable drafts at some windows. The top floor ceiling is not concrete but made of joists, covered underneath on the first floor with drywall and boards on top. Between the joists, there appears to be rock wool insulation packed in.

We have a 9 kWp photovoltaic system with battery storage, which the previous owner also installed. As it currently stands, the electricity from the photovoltaic system cannot be used for the heat pump, only for other household electricity. There is a separate meter with a heating electricity contract. Surplus electricity is fed back into the grid.

I recently received the heating electricity bill, showing that from March 2021 to March 2022—one full year—we used about 12,500 kWh for heating and hot water, which I find quite high. I definitely want to take action, especially since electricity prices are rising sharply. I’m not an experienced DIYer, but I can assist and have very helpful father and father-in-law who have a lot of skills. So, some things could be done ourselves, although time is always a factor.

A no-brainer seems to be replacing the window seals and adjusting them so they close tightly again. I am already in contact with a company for this.
Next, I’m thinking about insulating the roller shutter boxes. I would probably get a company to do this as well.
I’m considering insulating the basement ceiling with insulation boards that can be glued or fixed with plugs. If there are instructions available, we would rather do that ourselves. Or should I focus on insulating the top floor ceiling or installing insulation between the rafters? Or both? Probably not at the same time—maybe one this year and the other in a year or two. What would be the better order?

Would it make sense to modify the photovoltaic system so that the electricity can be used for the heat pump? I would have to hire an electrician for that, which costs money. But then the electricity would be usable for heating, and there would be only one basic fee. On the other hand, the yield in winter is not very good, and I would lose the cheaper heating electricity tariff. I once tracked generated, fed-in, self-used, and purchased electricity over a longer period and basically concluded that the conversion might not be worthwhile. But now electricity prices are rising dramatically.

Insulating the facade and/or installing new windows is honestly too expensive for me right now. On the other hand, we will need to have the entire exterior repainted next year or the year after. That costs several thousand when done professionally, which would almost offset the cost of external wall insulation. But presumably, these two should go together—insulation and new windows—because doing only one is not sensible and could cause problems with condensation.

So, that turned out to be quite a long message. I hope it’s understandable. How would you proceed? If I forgot anything, just ask. I might also add a follow-up later.

Best regards,
Tobi
M
MartinR.
22 May 2024 12:55
The manufacturer of the miracle product is the company ADITEX s.p.o.
Customers include Coca Cola, BASF, FAME, and many others. This year’s customer is the largest German manufacturer of insulation materials.
They all fall for the hoax. I am impressed.
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Cronos86
22 May 2024 13:07
The material may have its justification in industrial applications, but for use in single-family homes (for insulation) it is currently not suitable and should not be promoted as such.
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MartinR.
22 May 2024 13:13
I think we have to wait and see what the next certificates indicate. Tomorrow, I have a meeting scheduled with the DIbT. Let’s see what they have to say about this article.
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Adam2112
22 May 2024 21:51
There is nothing more to add.

Concrete frame construction; all other details can be seen in the Ubakus screenshots. The property is located in the Bergisches Land.

This is not Aditizol; PScoat is PScoat.
Document with U-value formulas, simulation interface, and two thermal images.
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parcus
19 Jun 2024 14:20
The technical datasheet refers to the equivalent thermal conductivity, meaning radiative insulation, not the thermal conductivity class of an insulation material. This can also be seen from the unit of radiative insulation, W·m−1·K−1, compared to thermal conductivity, W/(m·K). For building materials, only the design value of the thermal conductivity should be used for calculations, as is the case with vacuum insulation. Therefore, the technical datasheet essentially provides no relevant information.
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Cronos86
19 Jun 2024 14:50
The thermal imaging photos must have been taken before the renovation because the window frames are warmer than the exterior wall... If there is PS coat applied, the wall should theoretically perform better.