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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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.

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    • CommentAuthorRex
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026
     
    What ho one and all,

    Kinda trivial as it does not concern me but just out of interest!

    Have a new neighbour in a 1930's house and they are having the place re-wired. Obviously, it mean removing all the wiring that is covered with plaster.

    Which gets me thinking, how would a future owner of my t/f house with Warmcel insulation, do the rewiring?
    Not easy as they would have to cut slots out of Fermacel. I also have the ceiling fully insulated with Warmcel.

    How is it done?
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    I sometimes think that we, with our houses, at this stage are still 'benefiting' from the well-understood standard way of building that prevailed right into the 60s/70s, when my architectural career got going. Since then, everyone's been inventing novel ways of building, for good reasons.

    Just about any existing house that I'm called upon to alter/update, I can still see or reliably deduce what's 'under the skin' - which I then proceed to confuse by today's ever-changing idea of novel methods! Maybe some of those earliest novel methods are few enough that I can recognise them OK, as they get old enough to want modifying.

    If people are still modifying their houses in 20/30yrs time (and I wouldn't so predict the future, as a extrapolation of our ever-more-unaffordable labour-intensive present practice), they'll find, on opening-up, a lot more odd, unadaptable constructions to make the best of.
    • CommentAuthorowlman
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    Well, I suppose for lighting, if it were all 12V, cables it could almost be surface mounted and devices wi-fi controlled. In the realm of domestic kitchens, the sands are shifting if not already shifted.
    I have a feeling that day of the large static cooking appliances, ovens, hobs, ranges, except for the real enthusiast is waning.
    Nowadays, there are so many 13A worktop cooking appliances, why would you devote precious worktop, floor space and cabinets. to things that stand idle most of the time. It seems everything is available from worktop pizza ovens to combo ovens, air fryers, ice cream makers, all getting more and more sophisticated, you name it. Simply stick them out of sight in a cupboard when not in use.
    The implication for wiring for example could be one single high amperage, re-wirable, ducted, kitchen feed. With continuous decorative surface mounted, socket trunking with numerous outlets, more than now exists in most kitchens.
    This whole setup could be easily rewired in future, or adapted to include things like undersink boiler feeds, negating running hot water pipes to the kitchen sink. All this basic stuff exists now, provided interior designers think services at the outset.
    It may be interesting to visit KBB at the NEC this Spring to see if anyone is really thinking like this amongst all sea of wonderful fancy laminates.
    Just an idea.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026
     
    Posted By: RexHave a new neighbour in a 1930's house and they are having the place re-wired. Obviously, it mean removing all the wiring that is covered with plaster.
    I confess my ignorance. If you rewire a house, do you have to remove all the old wiring, or can you just put new wiring in as well?

    Also, does Warmcel form [glued together] lumps after it is installed or does it remain a loose powdery material? (I think I know but I'm not sure)
  1.  
    Posted By: djhI confess my ignorance. If you rewire a house, do you have to remove all the old wiring, or can you just put new wiring in as well?

    The old wiring can be left in place and cut back as far as possible/reasonable. That's up to the owner, cheaper to leave the old but perhaps a better job to remove it.

    Over here a lot of older wiring (and some new) is in conduits in the wall (which may have rusted over time) so there is the possibility of pulling through new wiring using the old as a pull through. I always use double insulated buried in the plaster.

    Modern wires (copper with plastic insulation) properly installed and rated should last 50 - 100 years so a) not my problem and probably not my childrens problem either and b)who knows what will be the standards of the day by then.

    Posted By: djhAlso, does Warmcel form [glued together] lumps after it is installed or does it remain a loose powdery material? (I think I know but I'm not sure)

    The Warmcel I had installed was blown in with sufficient force / pressure that it compacted to the point that it would not slump over time and as a result there was / is no way you could push anything through it.

    For rewiring in the loft I would always put the wiring over the insulation so that presents no problem but with due regard to any de-rating needed that results from drop down through the insulation. From memory you are allowed 50 cm through insulation without de-rating.
  2.  
    I rebuilt and insulated a room, finished just in time for Christmas just past, intello membrane everywhere.

    Now it's January and I've used the room a few weeks and realised the light switch is in the wrong place and I need another socket. Trying to work out how to do that without disturbing my painstaking airtightness work.


    It's unwise (of me) to assume that wiring changes are someone else's problem for 50 years hence!
  3.  
    Edit to add - the house has several generations of wiring left abandoned in the walls and loft - no need to remove the old stuff though it prevents confusion - but the walls will need chasing anyway to install the new stuff.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenNow it's January and I've used the room a few weeks and realised the light switch is in the wrong place and I need another socket. Trying to work out how to do that without disturbing my painstaking airtightness work.
    Light switches are a solved problem nowadays. My preferred solution is a kinetic wireless switch. There's an RF receiver+relay that gets wired in the power circuit near the lamp and the switch itself is just stuck on the wall surface. It needs no batteries; presumably uses piezo to generate an RF signal. There are also wifi/zigbee ones that do need a battery but allow for integration into your smart home (whatever that is :cool: )

    Sockets are more of a problem since they need a power connection. :cry: But in general that's why you put a service cavity in front of the VCL and behind the plasterboard.
  4.  
    Further addition: IKEA are doing RGBW dimmable light bulbs that come paired with a wireless dimmer/colour/off switch, £12 for the lot. If this is the future I can't see anyone installing droppers to hardwired switch boxes in the wall anymore.

    The total of all the lightbulbs for the whole house is around 250 Watts now, so I can't see anyone installing three separate 6A lighting circuits next time either (4000W).
  5.  
    Post crossed with DJH. The wiring for this house is all in the loft, so any change always means feeding it through the VCL/AT somewhere, even if just removing old stuff.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenThe total of all the lightbulbs for the whole house is around 250 Watts now, so I can't see anyone installing three separate 6A lighting circuits next time either (4000W).
    You need more than one though, because if the RCD trips on one circuit you've still got light to find a torch.

    If this is the future I can't see anyone installing droppers to hardwired switch boxes in the wall anymore.
    But yes, I made a mental note when we built (ten years ago) that wiring for light switches was no longer needed. Just after I'd put in all the wiring :cry:
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenPost crossed with DJH. The wiring for this house is all in the loft, so any change always means feeding it through the VCL/AT somewhere, even if just removing old stuff.
    But that means you only need holes in the plaster rather than chasing channels? Plus some Siga Rissan tape to patch the Intello.

    edit: Ah, presumably you need to make a vertical channel from the ceiling to wherever you need the new socket. Duh! Anyway, that's what you need a service cavity for.
  6.  
    Everyone in the house carries a torch everywhere in their pockets, it's attached to their camera and their internet connection. They can even make phone calls with it! We do still have an old style torch somewhere in the house, but idk if it still has batteries. Plus the lamp near the consumer unit is plugged into a socket circuit.

    On kitchen appliances, saw an interesting development of a full size oven/hob with a chunky lithium battery built in. You plug it into a 13A socket, it charges the battery offpeak, then you don't need a 32A circuit for the occasions when all the rings are on, as the battery makes up the difference over what the 13A can supply. Was aimed at people replacing gas appliances who don't have a cooker circuit to their kitchen.
    • CommentAuthorRex
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    I did want my Warmcel to be damp filled but the company who were going to do it, went into liquidation. the next company told me that the 180mm was too deep for damp fill, so had to scrim everything and they blew it in.

    Although they hit all the density marks, I later had the need to do some extra work at the top of a couple of walls and found there to be large compression gaps in the Warmcel. In my opinion, the Warmcel had slumped, which frankly, is hardly surprising when you consider a 2.4m high column of blown fabric with no supporting restriction to prevent slumping. No matter the density feedback from the top of the cavity, gravity will always give greater density at the base.

    They guys had to come back, remove 100mm diameter holes at the top of virtually every cavity, add some more Warmcel then I had the massive job of replacing, filling and flattening all these holes.

    I was not a happy bunny! I am now convinced that there probably gaps at the top of every wall, but ignorance is bliss so not intending to find out!

    Damp would have been so much better.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenEveryone in the house carries a torch everywhere in their pockets, it's attached to their camera and their internet connection. They can even make phone calls with it! We do still have an old style torch somewhere in the house, but idk if it still has batteries. Plus the lamp near the consumer unit is plugged into a socket circuit.
    A different household to ours. :bigsmile: Phones live on a table and only get picked up if there is a call. I trust there is another lamp near the CU in case the relevant socket breaker opens?
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 23rd 2026 edited
     
    Before sheathing/plasterboarding/scrimming, before blowing-in, I specify light galv garden wire @ 400 vertical c/s, woven horizontally in-out-in from stud to stud (or rafters), so running diagonally across each tween-stud space, wound round a nail head to prevent it sliding down the stud. Gives the Warmcel something to grip around, as it consolidates.
    • CommentAuthorRex
    • CommentTimeJan 24th 2026
     
    I did put scrap bits of wood into the studs to create kinda chicanes. But there were so many that I did not do them all.

    I had wondered if the second company were being a little cautious regarding the damp fill falling out, but also wondered, perhaps it could be done twice. Half fill the first pass then when a bit dry a few days later, repeat to completely fill.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 24th 2026
     
    Posted By: Rexalso wondered, perhaps it could be done twice. Half fill the first pass then when a bit dry a few days later, repeat to completely fill.
    But that would have required two visits, and maybe twice the cost?
    • CommentAuthorArtiglio
    • CommentTimeJan 24th 2026
     
    As in a previous comment by djh, a service space is the obvious solution, and perhaps should be part of building regs asap.
  7.  
    In my case, there is actually a batten/service space between the intello and the plasterboard, and that's part of the problem. I really don't want cold air to blow around in that void.

    The space is on the inboard side of the airtight membrane. The main wiring for the rest of the house is on the outboard side of the airtight layer, in the loft.

    Therefore any new wiring has to puncture through the airtight layer somewhere around ceiling level before running down the wall in the void.

    Access to the membrane to make/seal the puncture is complicated because I have to cut out an A4 size section of the plasterboard, wallpaper, battens, coving to access enough of the membrane at its wall-ceiling junction to be able to apply a wide sticky patch.


    An electrician would have no qualms coring 15mm holes to feed the wires down from the loft into the service cavity and would only fill any cosmetic bits, leaving an open hole from the loft into the service cavity to blow cold air all around the room. (Don't ask how I know this to be true!)
    • CommentAuthorrevor
    • CommentTimeJan 25th 2026
     
    Posted By: WillInAberdeenAn electrician would have no qualms coring 15mm holes to feed the wires down from the loft into the service cavity and would only fill any cosmetic bits, leaving an open hole from the loft into the service cavity to blow cold air all around the room. (Don't ask how I know this to be true!)


    When I was doing our build I once asked at an exhibition stand, a company promoting air tightness services, where typically they find air leaks, The reply was wherever a tradesman has been. Skirtings, window frames, joist ends plumbing waste pipes electrical boxes,etc.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 25th 2026 edited
     
    And I heard airtightness gury Paul Jennings asked 'how long do initial airtighness test results last, before deteriorating?' - he answered 'six months' and he put that down to sticky tapes beginning to develop tiny gaps, 'tiny' being quite enough to cause significant initial effect, which only grows but at declining rate, proportionately, after that initial jump.

    From which I conclude that expensive sticky tapes are to be avoided, by using structural materials, not membranes and tapes, as the airtightness layer, including designing-out the numerous tricky corners and junctions that conventional-wisdom airtightness methods still create, for which sticky tapes are the only solution, if only you could actually get your fingers in there. Prime, advised, culprit being to put a plastic membrane too far inboard, where it's penetrated by numerous objects like joist ends. Instead, put the airtight layer (and similarly, the insulation) right outboard, where it can form an unbroken 'tea-cosy' right from roof-ridge down to foundations - easy if you think it out. Then the very few penetrations necessary, such as yes, flues, mains electricty incomers, can be designed individually, ingeniously, with wodges of quality sealant injected into deep joints of controlled width, scrupulously clean, never with sticky tapes.

    Even rampant tradesmen, in future, can be guarded against, by choosing structural airtightness materials such as blown-in Warmcel which even if only 'moderately airtight', coupled with e.g. ply or OSB3 sheathing gapfilling glued-and-screwed/power-nailed, also 'moderately airtight', add up to 'pretty good airtightness' but with the advantage of easy cheap foolproof installation, long-term sustained robustness, and relative immunity to random hole-making in future.
  8.  
    Unfortunately a service cavity is the same as dot'n'dab plasterboard - you know there's a gap behind the plasterboard, you can feed it's cold where a draft is blowing round behind it. But you can't see where the draft is getting into the cavity unless you can take all the plasterboard off. That disruption barrier is too great so you just have to live with it!

    Regretting using plasterboard on battens with a cavity now, the next room is likely going to use wet plaster so that the airtight layer remains visible and repairable through it's lifetime.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 25th 2026
     
    Yeah, internal wet plaster or external render are good structural airtightness layers, which can be inspected and remedied - but still with great problems at their edges.
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeJan 25th 2026
     
    The above comments cover several points:

    - I still think service cavities are a good idea. They should be filled with a 'wool' insulation to reduce or eliminate air movement without restricting the passage of cables etc.

    - There's no need to use patches over penetrations. Small pieces of Rissan can be fit to make an airtight joint in a small space. Though neatly cut pieces of plasterboard are fairly easy to replace and skim.

    - My opinion and guess is that airtightness tape seals made by the leading firms probably last a reasonable length of time. But only if they've been properly installed onto clean surfaces and pressed into place properly (back of a knife is what I used).

    - But having said that, I also believe in wet plaster as an airtight layer, and I use a thick internal lime plaster layer around the house as a primary air barrier. I haven't seen any sign of any cracks in it yet, although I've seen a few narrow crack in skim over plasterboard etc at the corners of rooms where they don't need to be airtight. The main downside is my rule for no cables or pipes etc embedded in the airtight plaster or behind it. Makes providing power near the outside walls interesting :devil:

    - I also like 'structural' airtightness materials like glued boards and some insulations. As ever their junctions with each other and with other parts of the building need good thinking.

    - I haven't [yet] had another airtightness test done, but equally I haven't noticed any draughts or any increase in heating bills over the years.
  9.  
    Posted By: djhI still think service cavities are a good idea. They should be filled with a 'wool' insulation to reduce or eliminate air movement without restricting the passage of cables etc.

    If you put insulation in the service void then you should refer to the relevant de-rating table for the cable de-rating required for insulation one side or cable imbedded in insulation as appropriate.
  10.  
    I discussed this with the insulation supplier I was using, you can put a little insulation in the battens/service void but as it is on the 'wrong' side of the VCL (the warm side) so need to be very mindful of condensation risk. They did some modelling and thought 25mm of wool insulation would be ok.

    You can get acoustic wool and wood wool in that thickness, or 'peel' 25mm slices off a normal 100mm mineral wool.
    • CommentAuthorborpin
    • CommentTimeFeb 15th 2026
     
    The talk of wireless connections is fine, but unless you continually (well occasionally) change batteries, you still need power to the wall switch positions, to power the wireless controllers.

    What you don't then need is the switch wire which makes things so much simpler. I'd use a star layout with loose wires pulled in conduit - the French do this part right.

    For insulation I used Icynene and it hasn't gone anywhere! I would definitely use it again. I'm a FosterTom fan of the teacosy. My amendment to that is a double stud wall. One - internal for structure and the second outer one to minimise cold bridges and allow the installation of window shutters. Finished with cladding of some sort. Minimal concrete/bricks etc!

    New design is all in my head - all I need is land and money :bigsmile:
  11.  
    The kinetic light switches don't need power to the wall positions, they generate it from your finger pressure when you push the switch.

    The other wireless kind use battery power and there's no fundamental difference with a TV remote control. Yes they need batteries, but the batteries last for years, so not worth the material and labour to run a mains power supply to them.

    And it's nice to have a light switch on the coffee table in front of the armchair with the TV remote, so you don't have to get up to dim the lights!
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2026
     
    Posted By: borpinThe talk of wireless connections is fine, but unless you continually (well occasionally) change batteries, you still need power to the wall switch positions, to power the wireless controllers.
    That's why I like kinetic switches; they don't need any power supply at all.

    FWIW I have a bunch of Govee T&H meters with batteries. Now I've set them up with rechargeable batteries it's just a background routine thing keeping an eye on their batteries.
   
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