Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Heat Pumps for the Earflap Crowd

In my research for the new TV series This New House (premiering at 8pm, July 29, on the DIY Network), I came across a heat source you might want to check out.

Heat pumps are tried-and-true machines that cool and heat buildings across the southern tier of the U.S. They use refrigerant to move heat from inside to outside, or vice versa. Like an air-conditioner, they take heat out of houses and dump it outside in the summer; in the winter, the process gets reversed, capturing latent heat in air down to about 37 F, concentrating it by compressing the refrigerant, and sending the heat inside. But below 37 F, they rapidly lose effectiveness, working constantly to try to keep up with heat demand. This is why they’re less common or economical up north, where they require back up systems that heat (expensively) with electricity.

There’s a company in the heart of the frost belt—Bangor, Maine—that’s cracked the code for heat pumps for cold country. By adding a secondary booster compressor, which basically turbo-charges the process, the Hallowell Acadia heat pump (http://www.gotohallowell.com/Acadia™-Products/) is able to draw heat from air as cold as -30 F. As company founder Duane Hallowell puts it, “It’s a heat pump on steroids.”

The heat-pump process is based on the simple fact that heat goes to cold: whenever something is colder than the surrounding air, the heat in that air transfers to it, as the system tries to equalize. By making the outside coil of the heat pump even colder than the air, the Acadia is able to capture latent heat in frigid conditions. Concentrate that heat and transfer it inside and, voila, you’re heating a northern house using the outside air. And it’s all done with electricity, freeing the user from the vicissitudes of the oil and gas markets.

About 4,000 Acadia heat pumps have been sold since the company opened in October of 2006. They cost about $10,000 installed—that’s compared to $30,000 for a geothermal system, which uses the ground as a heat source. The machines are eligible for tax and utility rebates up to $4000 and provide between 25 and 55% cost savings over natural gas and oil, depending on electricity costs in your area.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Summer 2010

June's house of the month is a glimpse of the future It's a demonstration house that contains just about every high-tech bell and whistle currently on the market. Which of them will make it in the long run? Only time will tell, but it's more than academic to check them out in a real-life situation, which is the idea behind the Cleantech house in Beverly, Mass., open for tours now and for sale later. Check it out at http://www.bruceirving.biz/houseofthemonth.html


For house geeks, check out the National Trust for Historic Preservation's "@home" website: http://athomenation.org/. Lots of good tips and links for everything from historic homes for sale to insurance programs to folks' house baby pictures, including those of yours truly: http://athomenation.org/pg/photos/album/1669/northern-maine-boathouse.

If you're thinking of replacing your windows (and you know I have strong opinions about that*), putting new windows into an addition, or upping the energy-efficiency of your original windows, make sure your contractor knows about the Department of Energy's volume-discount program for highly efficient triple-pane windows and start-of-the-art Low-E storm windows: http://www.windowsvolumepurchase.org/


And on the self-promotion front, I've been getting a lot of calls lately from from people considering the purchase of a house and looking for a second opinion. They're falling in love with the place, but want a blunt assessment from someone with no agenda.

Most of the houses I've visited for assessment are being bid on by multiple parties. When we put dollars and time to the tasks needed to make the house work for my clients, more than half of my clients swallow hard, realize that they really want the house, and go into their bid determined to get it. A few, however, see that the project is way bigger than they thought and walk away, a bit disappointed but breathing easier.

If you know someone looking for a second opinion on a house purchase, please consider passing my name along.

And finally--having nothing to do with home renovation--is my strong recommendation that you check out my sister's killer goats' milk caramel, made painstakingly by hand on her small farm in Vermont. It's award-winning, its organic, and it's unbelievable on ice cream:http://www.fattoadfarm.com/.


* But don't take my word for it. Here's a link to some 15 scientific analyses that say that replacement windows are a bad idea in most cases: http://historichomeworks.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1600