[Greenbuilding] upgrading a 1959 1800 sf building in Montreal
Carmine Vasile
gfx-ch at msn.com
Sat Apr 30 14:22:46 CDT 2011
Stewart: In answer your question: "Anyone have advice on where to get the most bang for the buck?", select systems having the largest unsubsidized Savings-to-Investment-Ratio (SIR) so that poor people don't have to help pay for pale-green systems installed by the rich.
Carmine
gfxtechnology.com
Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2011 12:42:31 -0700
From: molasses at q.com
To: greenbuilding at lists.bioenergylists.org
Subject: Re: [Greenbuilding] upgrading a 1959 1800 sf building in Montreal
Stewart Abbey wrote:
> I recently purchased a 30'x60' building built in 1959. A 20x20 garage
> with a room above exposed on three sides. Crawl space with 2 floors
> and a flat roof. Exterior is brick in good shape. Tar and gravel
> roof was redone in 2008. Some windows have been changed, about 2/3rds
> are the the 1960,s screw-on aluminum guillotine type that leak like a
> sieve!! Oil fired hot water heat (with original cast iron boiler
> probably 60% efficient). One heating zone for each floor. Main floor
> has 3 apartments, 2nd floor has 2 41/2room apartments. Heating
> loops all pass though the crawl space. Walls are 2x4 construction and
> would have the standard of the day 3" of rockwool or fiberglass.
> Oil consumption was 5700 liters in 2010, and 5000 liters in 2011=$4500
>
> Last fall I had the crawlspace walls and rim joists blown with
> 21/2" of foam. Installed plastic on the crawlspace floor.
> The 2 second floor apartments will be empty next month. I'm
> thinking of blowing densepack cellulose into the 2x10 flat roof cavity
> from the inside through 3" holes in the gyproc. The current ceiling
> insulation is 3" rockwool or fiberglass. COST $5000+ plastering. The
> cost seems a lot but I know it is a slow job to do right. The
> contractor says 1 1/2 days per unit.
> We are probably getting gas on the street this summer and I am
> considering going to a 98% efficient
> gas condensing boiler. That alone should cut the heating bill by 50%.
> Gas is 93 cents per cubic meter.
> At the same time we would add zones so each unit would have it's own
> zone and thermostat.
> I am not planning on doing major renovations as the building is sound
> and well built.
>
> Anyone have advice on where to get the most bang for the buck?
> Stewart Abbey
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