Keeping your home healthy and warm during the colder months requires careful preparation. Put insulation and heating in place well ahead of time to ensure your home is nice and snug.
Keeping your home healthy and warm during the colder months requires careful preparation. Put insulation and heating in place well ahead of time to ensure your home is nice and snug.
As we’re getting ready to hibernate over winter, our home’s ability to generate and retain heat becomes a key factor of wellbeing. Insulation is a must as it forms a barrier between the interior and the outside world, creating a space that is less prone to condensation and can be heated efficiently. Insulation alone will make a big difference, and adding a suitable heating system will ensure that the temperature in your home is comfortable.
Insulation is the first step to a warmer and healthier home. While there are minimum requirements for insulation in new homes and additions, it’s worth spending a little more to exceed these requirements and get an even warmer, more comfortable home with lower power bills. A Homestar consultant, your builder or architect should be able to tell you how much insulation you will need.
“A well-insulated home will provide year-round comfort, and cost less to cool and heat,” says Dana Alexander, Business Development Manager at Homestar. “Insulation also helps to reduce noise levels and condensation. Research has found that installing insulation will lead to health benefits such as reduced incidence of asthma.”
Most heat is lost through the roof, so that should be your top priority. About 42 per cent of heat loss from an average uninsulated home occurs through this area (up to 60 per cent in older houses). About 24 per cent of heat, from an average uninsulated home, is lost through the walls. If you’re using a framed construction system, insulation should be placed within the wall framing. If you’re building from scratch consider increasing the framing size to fit in more insulation. Up to 20 per cent of heat loss occurs through the floor of uninsulated houses.
Proper installation is critical for making sure insulation works effectively and is safe. While it’s essential to avoid creating gaps and spaces, as they will allow warm air to bypass the insulation and escape, in some spaces (such as around chimney flues) a safety gap is required. You can install some kinds of insulation yourself, but it is recommended you get a professional if you require a lot of safety clearance gaps.
Once you have created a home that is insulated and will retain the heat you create, it’s time to choose the right heat source for your home. Hot water central heating systems are more or less a given overseas – and they are becoming more and more popular in New Zealand as well. These systems use water to circulate the heat, which is a gentle and quiet way to heat every room in your house evenly. No air or dust is blown around.
Radiator central heating systems utilise hot water that is piped through your home to radiators located in different rooms. A range of European-designed radiator models and styles is available, so you don’t have to worry about them looking out of place. “You don’t have to be building or renovating to enjoy all the benefits of central heating,” says Sean Stephens from Plumbcraft. “It’s simple and cost-effective to retrofit a boiler and radiator into your existing home. And it can be done in less than a day.”
Underfloor central heating can be used in concrete and tiled areas, as well as under carpet. The floor of your home is separated into zones, allowing you to heat centrally or room by room. The hot water systems are mainly installed in new homes with pipes laid in the concrete slab, but they can also be retrofitted as part of a renovation project.
Generally speaking, central heating has a high capital cost depending on the type of system you select, but it can produce low running costs. When it comes to underfloor heating, water-based systems are more economical than electric systems. However, electric air heat pumps are a cost-effective choice for central heating when connected to a distribution system.
Other heating options include fireplaces, wood burners and oil heaters. Open fires are often very inefficient and draw in cold air, which can actually make the rest of the house feel colder, but modern, freestanding burners are economical and environmentally friendly. They’re very useful in cold or isolated areas as they don’t rely on electricity. In the cities, gas fireplaces are an excellent choice. Fuelled by either natural gas or LPG, most new models are clean burning, efficient and controlled via a thermostat if desired. Check the energy efficiency rating and the heating output. Electric oil heaters are suitable to heat small rooms at a reasonable cost. One of their main advantages is their portability.
With all heating options, it's important to get the size of the unit right, so that you get enough heat out of it but don’t waste energy and money. The size of heater you need is influenced by the size and shape of the room, the layout of the house, the amount of insulation you have and where you live. The heater sizing calculator at www.energywise.govt.nz helps you work out what kind of output you really need to keep a room at a healthy temperature.
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