What is the best way to insulate an old home from the outside?

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Is insulating an existing home from the outside a good solution?

Cate Prichard June 26, 2021Last updated: July 6, 2021

我们买了一所最近重新装修过的房子,里面的一切都合我们的意。然而,我们坚信绝缘是不够的。我们被告知,吹入式隔热只适用于空墙——我们的墙有隔热,但似乎还不够。我们是否应该考虑和承包商一起探索建造与外界隔绝的东西?我们有一面砖墙,其余的都是墙板。浪费所有用于隔热的室内装置似乎很可惜。谢谢你的建议!

Responses (3)

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Terry Chemij 6 months ago

Hi Mike. I'm curious to hear if you tried this method and if it worked? I have ugly yellow siding on the second level of my home on three sides AND our house is freezing in the winter, so we are looking to remove the siding and insulate it from the outside. Best. Terry

Mike Reynolds
Mike Reynolds 6 months ago

Hi Terry, which method do you mean? There are a few safe ways to insulate the exterior, which depend on quite a few factors -

Where you live (your climate zone),

How the existing wall is built (is it insulated and is there an interior vapor barrier)

How much space you have to insulate (do you have close neighbors or a driveway limiting how much insulation you can install)

The point being – it’s most common to see people put foam on the exterior, which will conserve heat, but 1 or 2 inches may trap moisture depending on the existing wall assembly, while putting 6 or 7 inches may alleviate that problem. The short story on that is - there is what is referred to as the ‘2/3s rule’ for home insulation. In cold climates you should have at least 2/3rds of your insulation outside of the vapor control layer, which would be the inside of the foam. That keeps the vapor control layer reasonably warm, which prevents moisture from condensing on it. So if you have 3 inches of insulation and put on 6 inches of foam that's exactly 2/3rds and allows your wall to stay dry. If you have 3 inches of insulation and add 1 inch of foam to the exterior that foam will be cold, and moisture can condense. If you give me a few of those details above I may be able help you come up with a plan.