Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: Dominic CooneySome on here have cooker hood extract to outside, I don't know how that works in a Passive House with MVHR but I'm interested.It doesn't. It would blow the airtightness. We do as you with a recirculating extractor. The MVHR extract definitely should NOT be above the hob.
Posted By: djhPH requires an extract or supply terminal in every room.
Posted By: Doubting_ThomasEveryhabitableroom - it is acceptable in Passivhaus to use what's called a 'cascade ventilation' strategyHmm, sorry, I was thinking about the need for ventilation in *every* room - "All rooms within the thermal building envelope must be ventilated either directly or indirectly (transferred air) with a sufficient volume flow rate. This also applies for rooms which are infrequently occupied by persons" and forgot about cascades. But cascades through a room would be fairly unusual - it's interesting that the only diagram in the passipedia article is one pointing out where it is NOT suitable! Most living rooms and the like tend to be on at least one external wall, often two, and have at least one corner that isn't in an air circulation path unless there's an air inlet. We do cascade through the hallway, which is a lot more common situation.
Posted By: revorIn the kitchen you will need a fire extract valveHmm, we don't. More important to me is that we have a filtered extract terminal in the kitchen - it gets dirty far more quickly than any other room.
Posted By: Victorianecohe reckons I shouldn't be using MVHR as the house (cavity wall) is going to be so leaky, you'd never recoup the costs....
Posted By: VictorianecoAn ASHP specialist came out today and he reckons I shouldn't be using MVHR as the house (cavity wall) is going to be so leaky, you'd never recoup the costs....But you're planning to do a big retrofit and you said you believed in airtightness, so that won't be the case, yes? MVHR will be required!
Posted By: VictorianecoMy biggest issue is the joists are 8" x 2" so I couldn't drill 75mm holes in these
Posted By: stonecolda central MVHR with radial fixing will have SUPPLY to every bathroom and living roomThis is simply wrong. There's no SUPPLY in any of our wet rooms, including the bathroom, and I've never heard of such a thing. Our system was professionally designed and PH certified.
Posted By: djhPosted By: stonecolda central MVHR with radial fixing will have SUPPLY to every bathroom and living roomThis is simply wrong.