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Level Up Strategies
Canada
Приєднався 24 сер 2018
Get Peace of Mind BEFORE You Build a New Home - with a Level Up Plan Review!
It is so much easier to prevent significant issues in the planning stage - before construction begins.
A home such an important investment! If you would like to get peace of mind that your plans aren't sending you down a path that will lead to trouble - we have a plan review service to help with that.
email: Spark@levelupstrategies.com
A home such an important investment! If you would like to get peace of mind that your plans aren't sending you down a path that will lead to trouble - we have a plan review service to help with that.
email: Spark@levelupstrategies.com
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Відео
Ep 8. Get Rewarded as you GROW - Building Depth In Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 0:45 The cost of EGO 2:25 Time sensitive is the part you want to control 3:05 Ask Yourself… 5:25 If you understand the risks 7:00 Recognize the learning 9:40 Do you have influence… 13:30 Hub of Time - Not merely Budgets 16:20 Pros and Cons of Square foot pricing 19:35 Respect your client
Ep 12. Hot to Build an Estimate and Quote that WORKS - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap on Deep Business Concepts 1:20 The Story Arc of your business 4:18 The gift of a disciplined approach 9:30 Risk and Pricing 10:14 Real Estimating Template 11:50 Thinking Thematically about the work 17:30 Clarity on real profit 22:00 Profit per day according to RISK 28:00 Real Quote with Description 29:25 Going through a quote live 34:10 Walk your clients into the project story 35:00 ...
2023 - Why you SHOULD and SHOULD NOT Build a Passive House
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If you have ever wondered about the Pro's and Con's of Passive House - This video is specifically for you! 0:00 Welcome to Passive House 0:40 Why you SHOULD 15:35 Why you SHOULDN'T
How to Choose the Right Builder for Your New Home or Renovation
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Your Builder REALLY Matters to the Success of your Project. Here's How to find the right one for you!
Ep 15. The Perceived Value for your Work - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Переглядів 332 роки тому
0:00 Recap 0:30 Coming to a completion 6:00 Value from your clients perspective 10:30 Know where to draw your line 14:40 the last 20% can take 80% of the effort 17:50 Early work has advantages 21:00 Don’t work ON your business - be present
Ep 14. The Expense of Downtime - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 0:50 Time over Money 1:20 Budgets tend to constrict 2:15 Unpacking Downtime 4:55 My gift was selfish 8:15 I don’t want to wait for you 11:15 Time between projects 14:40 The #1 Downtime 17:30 Early is in your hands 20:00 Value and Trust
Ep 13. Behind the Scenes when YOU Lead - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 0:50 looking to be an example 3:00 Learning from people in the margins 6:15 Language really matters 8:30 Set a high standard 11:15 The environment used to be an afterthought 14:40 Living wage 18:30 You are resourceful 21:30 Don’t dodge raising your standards 22:30 Recap on Risk profiles 26:40 What market with people find you in
Ep 7. Let's talk Money - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 0:30 Money and Role-models 1:45 Don’t be so tense 3:00 Hourly vs Contract bidding 6:25 Client phycology and Hourly work 10:45 Hourly often saves money 13:50 Getting your budget squeezed 17:22 Looking at Risk 21:50 Who pays when you are waiting 22:45 Being late is expensive for everybody 24:30 Hybrid hourly and contract
Ep 11. Unlock the Power of a Story Arc - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 0:30 Every project has a story 3:30 Arc are more natural 6:27 Risk Evaluation of your project 11:41 Risk doesn’t mean stop 16:55 Embrace consciousness 21:15 4 categories of an estimate 27:05 5 project planning questions 31:30 Definition of Done 34:10 Overstaffing for the win
Ep 10. When to say YES & HOW to say YES - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap about building something 1:30 Passion isn’t necessary 3:30 Contracting rewards innovation 4:15 Get disciplined in the best way 4:30 Understand - Quantify - Deliver 7:10 you need to understand what you do 9:35 Say no if you don’t trust the client 12:02 I think CIRCLES 14:20 Smooth transitions are profitable 16:50 Honour Mobilization
Ep 9. Money Talk #3 Paying and Getting Paid - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 2:30 You are a bank 3:00 Respect for people will help you not get stuck 4:00 I typically don’t shop for quotes 8:50 Billing schedules 9:40 Vet you clients with money 13:45 Understanding your business 17:30 Communicating for Trust 20:40 Contract Wording 24:55 Don’t be afraid of technology 27:35 Be a competent professional 29:50 HAVE CLEAN BOOKS
Ep 6. The Power of Themes & Getting Ready for Money - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap 1:47 Don’t loose your magic 4:15 The Power of Themes 5:20 Essence is Rooted 9:30 This changes everything 16:42 8/10 16:30 Niche Communication 20:05 Look in the rearview mirror 24:08 Being Provided For 24:38 Contentment is hard to come by 25:50 Don’t do Braindead Economics
Ep 5. Finding Your Rhythm through Work Profiles - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Переглядів 222 роки тому
0:00 Recap 1:45 Positioning at the point of need 2:45 Perception of need 4:30 Low vs High volume 5:45 I always said no to customers 6:30 Work equals Risk 7:40 You Busy? 8:35 Do you have something to loose if it doesn’t go well? 10:30 I hate warranty work 12:00 Done is Done 13:29 Pure Profit 15:25 Red Flags for me 18:40 Work Profiles 20:00 Optional work 20:50 Recurring 20:36 Necessary Urgent 25:...
Ep 4. How to Align with Your Customers Values - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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0:00 Recap on business infrastructure. 1:32 who do you sell do depends on their money 3:50 Borrowing from LEAN 8:50 Orienting you messaging to PQCDSM 10:27 How does “safety” play in? 13:28 Your going to need to plug-in to your customer 17:00 Be honest about your preferred approach 19:27 Own your lane and play in it 21:00 Touching on Hourly vs Contract 24:00 Necessary Minimums for you!
Ep 3. Understanding Your Client Through Money - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
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Ep 3. Understanding Your Client Through Money - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Ep 2. Trustability and Communication - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Переглядів 792 роки тому
Ep 2. Trustability and Communication - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Ep 1. Laying the Foundation and Defining the Path - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Переглядів 1012 роки тому
Ep 1. Laying the Foundation and Defining the Path - Building Depth in Business as an Entrepreneur
Honest Reflection on High Performance Building
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Honest Reflection on High Performance Building
Passive House vs Step 5 Net Zero Ready Expanded Explanation
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Passive House vs Step 5 Net Zero Ready Expanded Explanation
Passive House vs Step 5 Net Zero Ready House in 200 seconds or less
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Passive House vs Step 5 Net Zero Ready House in 200 seconds or less
Energy Advising - The Gear You Need & The Things You Don’t! Save $3,000 that I didn't need to spend!
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Energy Advising - The Gear You Need & The Things You Don’t! Save $3,000 that I didn't need to spend!
Houses Shouldn't Breathe - The Truth about Healthy Homes
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Houses Shouldn't Breathe - The Truth about Healthy Homes
Easy and Useful Cyber Security for Business
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Easy and Useful Cyber Security for Business
Easy and Useful Cyber Security for Personal
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Easy and Useful Cyber Security for Personal
2023 Net Zero vs Passive House explained + BC Energy Step Code
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2023 Net Zero vs Passive House explained BC Energy Step Code
Failure Friendly Culture has Belonging at it's Core
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Failure Friendly Culture has Belonging at it's Core
A Practical Guide to Cyber Security for ALL Business - especially SME's
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A Practical Guide to Cyber Security for ALL Business - especially SME's
I don't totally understand your take that the PH absolute standard is a disadvantage. Surely this is the whole point? When I go outside and its freezing I have to put on a sweater. I do have criticism of PH but its just that the institute has not managed to promote the standard so that its universally understood and accepted. Especially when its so obviously a no-brainer.
Thanks for the question. The disadvantage I perceive is that the standard isn't perceived as "fair", which will result in people avoiding it. What we need is people moving in the direction of well-insulated and airtight homes that are also healthy on mass - especially in colder climates where the inefficiencies are compounding the over-use of furnaces (gas or electric). It is a lot easier and less expensive for people on the west coast to achieve Passive House standards than it is for people in the mid-west. The inflexible standards are too binary in my opinion and don't take into account the climate zones will push people away. It is my opinion that a homeowner that achieves an energy demand for example of 16kWh/m2/yr in Detroit has achieved something much more significant than someone who achieves the standard of 15kWh/m2/yr in Las Angelas. But according to Passive House they would get Zero-credit. Yes, there are people who achieve the exact passive house standards in every climate zone. It just gets exponentially more difficult and expensive the colder it gets. For that reason, I expect the standard will not achieve mainstream adoption even though it's a great ideal. To me that feels like a disadvantage.
Do you offer passive dome-shaped designs as an alternative to traditional house styles? I’ve read that older homes often utilized simpler yet highly efficient building techniques, such as the dome shape itself. I’m curious if it’s possible to merge those time-tested methods with modern design elements.
The design of the home isn't the limiting factor. you can have a dome shaped structure - just need the right amount of insulation, shading from the sun and air/water barriers on the outside of the framing.
I don't think solar panels in a paddock next door should count. A microhydro system in a paddock next door would be a valid adjustment, but if you can't fit the solar panels on the house or at least in the quarter-acre block the house is on, that shouldn't count.
It's not really net zero until it's exporting as much energy back to the grid per annum as its annualised embodied energy. At that point, it's actually paying for itself - its total cost is net zero.
What we need, instead of an energy efficiency per square metre, is an energy efficiency per person. Each bedroom counts as either one or two people depending on the size of the room. Add them up and get a total "full house" occupancy count. Calculate the energy consumption of the house, and divide by the number of people it's designed to hold. That way you're not penalising either small houses or large-family homes, but you may well penalise houses that have two bedrooms and three living rooms. Which you really should.
As a new home owner exploring the efficiency of my older home, this is such a fantastic intro to terminology and concepts critical to that thought process. Thank you so much for putting this together.
Your welcome. I found a lot of the lingo intimidating and intangible when I started down this path. Good luck on your journey!
Will passive house be mandatory in the near future? The New Green Deal....... just sayin' 😮
Excellent content but please just say no to the term "building science." This is not a new branch of the physical sciences. It's a practical application of knowledge from various fields of science to develop technical methods to solve real world problems. There is already a term for this realm of human endeavor: engineering.
Breathability is a confusing term in the building world. It refers to the ability of a structure to manage water vapour. In the UK if a house was built before 1940, is a single brick build and has suspended floors then it will be a breathable system. Important because if non breathable (non vapour open) materials are used on the walls/floors, then vapour can't flow and will condense causing mould and damage to the brick. Much better to refer to it as vapour open or vapour permeable then confusions like this won't happen
Record heat waves every year , soon 100 degrees will be standard everywhere, there should be programs for super insulation everywhere! Yet……nothing, most want to ignore the problem
And in many 'established' countries (lots of history and old house) the main sort of 'better house' is a conversion or improvement which also limits the potential performance. EnerPHit is the equivalent (slightly lower performance) for conversions.
look up hempcrete. being airtight doesn't mean that the house can't breathe. there are 3 factors - air change so that the air inside is fresh, preventing heat loss getting rid of water vapour Hempcrete is airtight when it is "plastered" with a lime render so it prevents heat loss due to leakages. Hempcrete buffers heat due to its thermal insulation and thermal mass properties. Hempcrete is vapour permeable - this is not a leak - the vapour passes all the way through the wall and out the other side. no vapour sandwich! The only thing hemprete does not do is allow for air exchange. My solution is to open the window.. To which you say "you will lose all your heat", right? Not if your hempcrete wall has buffered heat in it - that heat gets released as the room cools. Which only leaves the filtration question unanswered. what about allergens, pollen, etc? If you are concerned about that then, yes you need an HRV/ERV otherwise, just open the window and let in some fresh air.
I built house nearly 15 years ago (a different era of low energy buildings)with an aim to get as close a passive house as possible, paying some extraa money, but no crazy money. Imhave tripple pane windows, 300 mm aircrete walls with extra 160mm EPS insulation. I have very high heat accumulation due to concrete floor and sealing which keeps nice climate. I measured where I stand based on used energy and it came out as 2.5 times the passive standard with ERV unit temporarily decommissioned (needs rework). I want to build a house extension and certainly in passive standard, with 450mm state-of-the-art aircrete plus insulation, etc. It make sense to go passive these days.
we are doing extension Reno, does it make sense to do passive Renos? or do as much passive as you can afford?
@@Vgallo In my unprofessional opinion, you should go passive if you can and to the extent you can. In Europe it's not difficult now and not costly. I guess that if you're in the US, the situation might be somewhat similar to what we had 15-20 years ago, when the triple pane windows were just taking off, HRVs weren't that common, etc. These days triple pane windows are standard here, every company does them, it's main stream, much cheaper. Double pane being considered budget. So do some ROI in Excel and see what makes sense, either from financial, or from comfort or from ecological point of view for you. I'm planning a house extension and for that I want to go passive or as close as I can. I put costs and U (R) values into excel sheet and found out, that seemingly the most expensive aircrete block (Ytong Lambda IQ) is the cheepest option out of the all aircrete, concrete and clay blocks, when calculated per unit if insulation value. I want to do a "flat" concrete slab roof with green roof and that might certainly be among more expensive options, but makes sense for me and I'm willing to invest into this solution. God luck with your choices!
So if I am planning on building a home in Harrisburg, PA with just under 1000 sqft are you saying I shouldn't consider a passive home?
Im not saying that you shouldn't consider it. I'm saying the larger the home you build - the calculations on energy demand based on floor area favour larger homes (that still maintain airtightness). When we did our training they emphasized how it's "easier" for a "Costco" or appartment building to get certified than a single family home. and its even harder for a tiny/small house than a large single-family home. The logic doesn't sit will with me because overall foot print of a 1,000 sqft small home is much lower than a 4,000 sqft house for example. None the less its an unfortunate glitch in how the equations are set up.
when someone comes into this kind of thing at the start this kind of ball park discussion is invaluable. i have a 1965 double brick house we just bought in Adelaide Australia. I want it to be as efficient as possible within our budget. Passive home ideas and net zero methods are what will inspire us but what we are starting with isn't that efficient but we will try!
It really sucks that all the ways to reduce your expenses are so very expensive. Not being able to afford to live cheaper sucks! The people who need to save money the least are the only ones who can afford to reduce their expenses.
You don’t have to pay any extra for the excuse
A plaque hanging on a wall is meaningless What you need is a Hydro bill over a five year period. That has zero energy use.
If you're trying to sell a house on the grounds that it doesn't use external energy to heat or cool, for sure. The only proof that counts is your bills.
@@tealkerberus748 I actually agree with your logic on this - I wish the industry was more practical. As a certified energy auditor I have been asked to come in and do an audit and energy model on an existing home that is going through a government grant program and needs the "before and after" calculations. It's a total waste of my time and their money. Just pull up the existing utility bills and all the REAL numbers are right there! Imagine a reality where builders actually had to guarantee the utility bills for a home for 3 years. That would incentivize more care and consideration throughout the building process! :)
You can always adjust the size of the windows, which will improve the overall performance of the house
The 15 kWh per square metre per year makes sense, but do you get certification before you have proven it over a 10 year. Assuming that you may go above or below in different years
This is all done off of energy modelling (which is comprehensive and rigorous) but it is ultimately uncoupled from the reality of how the house will actually perform. The best that can be done is the final blower door test to confirm it meets the projected air-tightness. That serves as the "checkmark" that the validity of the energy modelling. In reality many many homes - including large BC Housing projects end of performing WAY worse than the model projected. The issues compound in that instance because all of the heating utilities, ducting, ventilation equipment are no longer sized for the real situation and often end up needing to be replaced shortly after being installed new. It is tragic.
This was an excellent talk. I think you've pretty much said everything that needs to be said, in weighing the Passive House pros and cons. For us, in central British Columbia, Canada, cost was certainly a consideration. We were willing to spend the money on great windows, loads of insulation etc. But the architectural and auditing fees are very, very high. In addition, local sub-trades are old-school and unwilling to learn new skills. That means supervising their every move, all day, every day. Who is going to do that? My wife and I decided to design and build the very best home we could, using the information available from Fine Homebuilding Magazine, the Green Building Advisor, Build It Solar, Home Power Magazine and of course the internet. We designed an 1,100 sq, ft. rancher with double-stud, 12 inch thick walls, triple-glazed vinyl windows, raised-heel trusses, air-tight crawl-space and blown-in cellulose insulation. We used a pier-and-beam foundation instead of a traditional poured concrete foundation. We have large, 3.5 ft roof overhangs to prevent overheating in summer. We have R-36 floors, R-48 walls and an R-68 ceiling. Tremendous effort was made to ensure air-tight construction throughout. We have rainwater catchment off the roof devoted to flushing the toilet. We're fully off-grid, with a solar system in a nearby service building. We have evacuated-tube water heating panels on the roof combined with a coil in the wood cookstove. As we built the home entirely by ourselves there were no labour costs. It came in at Can$55 per square foot NOT including the solar. So there you have it: the best home we could build using very good materials, but not the best that money can buy. We use approximately one-fifth the energy to heat that our neighbours do, and no air-conditioning. Could we have done better? Absolutely. We could have spent far more money and bought much better windows. We could have built sixteen inch thick walls instead of 'only' twelve. But overall, with the information and the funds available, we built a fine home that performs about as well as we had hoped. Somehow word got out about our project and we occasionally get calls from complete strangers who come over for a tour of the place. The local papers have written us up. But the best part of this home is simply living in in. Even at minus 35C we let the fire in the wood cookstove go out before we go to bed, and relight it in the morning. We almost never, ever keep the fire going all day. Our friends keep their fires going around the clock for the entire winter. A dozen years later, we're very pleased with our work. So, as this video says, you can still have an AMAZING home without necessarily going the Passive House route, even though I have great respect for the PH program and ethos.
This project sounds like a lovely example of exactly what I am trying to convey. I really like the resourcefulness and thoughtful elements you put into your home. I was one of those folks who would love to see what you created. I am based in Kelowna, if you ever want to chat further send me an email. brandon@levelupstrategies.com
I feel like the kWh/m^2/yr unit makes alot of sense, since you pay electricity in the EU by the kWh and measure the house footage in m^2, so that number can be directly represented into the maximum cost of climatizing a house (actually I think it's 15 for heating and another 15 for cooling so double that at max) for a given electricity tariff. I calculated for my house (which is small) and it sets the limit at around 150€ on the simplest electricity plan, which is crazy, given that's around what it would cost right now to heat a single room for a month!
For the USA, It's best to say it the other way around "per year, per floor area, only so much energy needed", that way it shows it's annualised, size rated, and minimal heat. There's 10.7 sqft per m2, so it (15kWh) drops to just 1.4 kWh (a one bar (1kW) electric fire for one hour and 24 minutes for the whole year, or 1.6 minutes per week!)
Great job of plus and minus. I think at the end of the day, a client builds what they want to build. Some care about costs, some do not. My wife and I are retired. Our costs keep going up, but our pay checks do not. Anything we can build or do to hold our future costs is smart. I am an engineer and do not need some organization for approval of what I want to build. We can only build what we can afford and will not feel bad about that. We are doing ICF walls and SIP roofs, but very excellent dual pane windows as the triple panes are double in price. No return on investment there. We will have ERV, dehumidification, variable refrigerant, and additional fresh air controlled off of pressure diff. (positive interior), Merv 13 filtration. We live in a flood prone and hurricane area. I think we will be quite satisfied with our build and at a price we can afford. I want our home to be able to demonstrate what can built for anyone.
That sounds great! I'll bet many folks would love to view a video tour of your home when it's done. I know I would.
"The same all around the world". Over-simplification. Disagree? Then please explain the differences between Passive House and PHIUS.
Excellent, thorough presentation. Thank you!
Thanks, fantastic overview. I'm an ex sci/math teacher and you actually use some of my techniques. OK, I live in Taos, NM, both heating and cooling needs. And... was gonna build my second passive solar home but couldn't find land with water rights in time so bought a 1000sqft wanna-be PH but need to add a bedroom and make some adjustments (e.g. The ceilings are wayyyy too tall!) In Taos we rely on wood stoves for winter heat (the last design (walls of pumice-crete) uses 1/2 cord of wood for 1800 sq ft home). Wanted to come in at 1/4 cord for the next house. But man, one cloudy winter day's burn is 88 kWh. We're not gonna touch 15 kWh per sq meter per year. And in Taos we use lots of thermal mass (usually adobe) I wish PH could be done without electric motors, but I don't see it, cuz HRV coupled with the airtightness is the core of the PH model. But that still means burning wood. K, thanks for this intro. I learned a lot quickly.
Wicked well done!
I don’t understand. Why pay the extra money to get audited and certified? Just to pat yourself on the back and get a certificate?
It's a measurable marker of quality that you can hold contractors and subs to delivering.
@@tyronegrandstrandwill it increase the value of the home?
There are banks who will give you a higher mortgage when you buy a well insulated house! So if you can show your energy costs are very low, you can pay more on your mortgage. So yes, they are worth (a lot) more!
@tyronegrandstrand those who work with passive house nuts, charge 2 more times than regular contractors . Passive house doesn't make any sense. I think he was pretty clear about that
Without the certification and auditing you can’t be sure the quality and performance is delivered by the contractors. If you trust your contractors and they can work using PHPP without being audited you don’t need it. However, if you don’t and you want a fabulous house, it is worth doing the certification to make sure. Also, if you sell it, the certificate proofs the quality is there. Some people who want to be sure the standard is achieved will pay extra for that certification.
Loved your presentation and your passion really came over. good job.
What do you think about building with ICF's
PH is properly for cold countries, it's not for tropical countries as Asia. As all facilities is also designed to meet with thier application such HRV which is designed for high differential temperture.
Add a dehumidifier for tropical areas if you’re using an HRV
Hot countries are going to face very different challenges in future, with heat and humidity together rising towards temperatures that will kill people outdoors. Keeping houses cool enough to be habitable is going to be life-saving technology.
Great content. Thanks for the presentation. Took me a while to follow along with the firefighter analogy until you got to “chubby house” and it clicked. It’s tricky because the step code appears performance based, but the 2018 reference house is indeed prescribed. Thanks again, hope you’re staying safe in Kelowna. Best wishes from Nanaimo.
I would like to thank you for doing theses videos (I also watched the PHC vs Net Zero). It is really good detailed and simple enough. I wanted to mentioned 1 otem you repeated twice in the presentation "you need triple glazed fiberglass windows with foam... vinyl crap" (24:40). I am a building envelope specialist (currently representing window company). The highest passive house standard is coming from Europe. Europe have almost no fiberglass windows and is based on uPVC and aluminum clad wood windows. Accordingly, mosy of the passive house certified windows are uPVC and aluminum clad wood windows and minority of foam filed fiberglass. I worked with fiberglass manufacturer as well and I am not here to talk down the fiberglass high performance products (although not all of them) but I felt that fair treatment should be given to the certified high performance uPVC and aluminum clad wood windows as well. I will be happy to further discuss this with you but wanted to professionally correct it for the public.
Helpful video, thank you. Do you build in Ohio or know builders that can meet these standards? I hate to be the ginea pig for a new builder to learn from.
Doug, I know that there are lots of motivated and smart trades professionals out there. I would do 2 things - go to a local high performance builders gathering (in Kelowna we have a "building science and beers" meet up monthly) so that you can meet people and start to build context for what you want to do. Also PHIUS (passive house USA) is a great resource. They will have a directory of certified professionals. All the best!
Good information. Plasma TV? What year was this filmed?
Mark thats funny, and the video was filmed in 2022. Truth is that my wife and I don't watch TV, and the last TV I bought was plasma (about 10 years ago). - so when I'm free flowing in a dialogue - that's what came out.
The right units are the following: space heating demand max. 15 kWh/m2a or heating load max. 10 W/m2
This goodness of God is seen in the Hebrew of v. 1. Yet, too many Believers seem to think that the *English* syntax of the verse is Inspired as well. This thinking is a mistake, and for one very self-evident reason: The English syntax... 'In the beginning, God...' ...suggests an aloof Creator. It also suggests that the main aim of this Creator, concerning the truth of the verse, is to 'lord it over' us. But that is not the spirit of Christ. That is the spirit of a Pharisee. For, a Pharisee is simply anyone who more loves to 'kiss up' to God's supposedly power-centric authority than to love God's self-evident goodness. The Hebrew syntax is verb-then-subject: 'In the beginning created...' Today, those who enjoy how the science-fictional character Yoda speaks will be able to appreciate the Hebrew syntax here. Yoda could be imagined to say, 'Created God the heaven and the Earth in the beginning He did! Mmm!' Here the verb, 'created', is put prior to the subject, 'God'. This is standard Hebrew syntax regarding the relation between verb and subject. If there were a twenty-second silence after each word, most people may begin to appreciate this verb-first syntax: In-the-beginning....................created....................God....................surely....................the-heaven....................and-more-surely....................the-Earth By putting the verb prior to the subject, one is given opportunity to predict and anticipate the subject. And, from there, one is begged to predict and anticipate the object(s). And, likewise from there, one is begged to SEE or SENSE the relationships involved; a 'narrative arc', or 'story arc': 1. First, God created the general, (or 'masculine') cosmos and the special (or 'feminine') Earth (Genesis 1:1). 2. Then God was concerned for how the Earth, as its own general subject, has the most valuable thing about itself in all the cosmos: its abiding maximal abundance of open liquid water (Genesis 1:2). 3. Then God was concerned for how all that water has a special relation to the Sun's light, hence the water cycle (vs. 3-10); 4. Then God was concerned for how that water cycle is to have a special beneficiary and member, namely water-based life as such (vs. 11-12); 5. Then God was concerned for how that water-based life was to have a special category, namely animal life (plant/animal/mineral = animal) (vs. 20-22, 24-25); 6. Then God was concerned for how animal life is to have its own special category, namely human life (vs. 26-28); 7. Finally, God was concerned that the general man is to have the special woman (Genesis 2:21-23). This seven-fold cosmic Divine Design can be seen both in the completed Creation and in Genesis 1-2. So there is nothing of happenstance either in (X) or (Y): (X) there are exactly five things that Genesis 1 reports that God names, (Y) these five things easily seem to be the five basic non-biological factors of Earth's water cycle: Names 1 and 2: binary cyclically distributed thermal regulation ( v. 4-5 ); Name 3: radiologically mediative atmosphere ( vs. 6-8 ); Names 4 and 5: binary thermal surface distribution system ( vs. 9-10 )
Very few would know and I would still question the person who thinks they know what 15 kWh per metre is in person. As you said, its science and verified and you use the PHPP software for exactly that reason, because I don't need to know what it feels like, I just need to know it was calculated and it happened (certified).
Loving the video... but you need a mic that is not so strong. I am heading the marker and it brings chills down my spine. Lol
Thanks for the feedback.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. My concern is with rockwool increasing heat in the summer months, as well with the poly iso future breakdown . Have you used gutex or timber hp products Woodfiber products?
Gerrit, I do not have any personal experience with gutex but know a few building professionals who really like it. Regarding Rockwool increasing heat - All insulation varieties if installed propery will cause similar challenges with “retaining heat” in the summer. So I recommend having a cooling strategy to supplement “passive cooling” regardless of what insulation you choose - gutex included.
Well done
Thanks. 😊
Good content .. thank you!
Your welcome. I’m glad it’s working for you. I would love to hear the results you discover in your business. Would you be opposed to sharing?
Seems like the European problem is their energy is hard to get and extremely expensive compared to what we get outside of Europe, especially in America. They get a lot more techy stuff too like heat pump dryers etc... But for sure in the north American continent it makes a lot more sense to make a normal house more efficient and possibly use solar panels instead. Here personally I'll be building a nice house that would actually have decent resale value to input cost and do a small solar array with a wood stove back up and a rain water system. Seems like purpose built up front without the extra utilities could actually pay off.
A very good explanation of the two.
Thank you for the clarity. Your explanation brought it all together for me.
Your welcome.
Thanx for sharing...
Roger, I am glad it's working for you!
I will likely listen to all of this series as i sense you are a very good person. I will likely see your content through my Christian and Biblical lenses, mechanical and construction lenses (level up strategies), being a good steward of God's blessings, etc. Thank you!
Very informative. Thankyou. I was just wondering do we need to do any kind of cources or certification as a builder to build a Net zero house in British Columbia ?
The answer to that is Yes - but not for the Net Zero part. In order to build any house in BC you need to be a licensed builder with a New Home Warranty insurance provider. If you choose to build a Net-zero home - there is no extra certification to do from a builders perspective. But I would say that there are training that would make that process easier. - like Passive House Consultant course, or Building Science.com training with Dr. Joseph. I've taken both and would recommend them both!
Terminology is really complicated and important for these topics, good on you for doing such a thorough presentation! We recently renovated a 70s home to what I'd call "Net-One Month," where we took more of a generation-based approach. I had looked into redoing all the siding with added external insulation, or spray foaming the entire house, even looked into geothermal. In the end, we did pretty much everything that was viable, and maybe a little more. It would have been really fun to try from scratch to include many more of the passive principles. People definitely should if building.
Good for you for taking steps on your home with the things that were viable! it can really be intimidating to do a high-performance renovation with so many opinions on what to do - and how to do it. Building from scratch does provide some unique advantages - but the retrofit side is where we as a community have a ton of potential to shape things for a brighter future. Thanks for sharing your personal experience! I think people are looking for examples of people who have chosen to take steps like what you have :)
Thanks, this is a great video. I had a question about the money test--would you still employ that if a prospective client just wanted to know what your standard wall assembly was, and why you chose that assembly?
tuber, im guessing your asking about the section that starts at 9:43 I don't know what you do, but I will take a shot at answering the question. I try to be on the side of generosity with my time - particularly with answering a couple questions. Since being on UA-cam, I get calls or comments from around the globe to answer questions, and I try to answer them just to be helpful. I typically don't get paid for those conversations, unless they want to take the conversation further. So if a client asks - what do you typically do in this situation? I have no problem answering those questions. And thats often a great chance for you to demonstrate your knowledge and experience as a professional (which builds trust in your potential client). It also is a great chance for you to get to know them and their project. So you can ask questions like - is this something you are looking to get help with? or are you planning on doing this work by yourself? Have you had other people come out and look at this for you? what was their feedback? I really like to work with clients that are able to have free-flowing and honest dialogue, so I go out of my way to chat with them to see if "I can trust them" Money starts to get involved with people "ask me to do something" - for them - thats inside the scope of my business. Do they want you to send a sketch? Give a quote? Perform an inspection? These are things that may be something you charge for - if you have enough work that you don't mind being selective. Just know that lots of people offer "free estimates" so you will loose some people if you are rigid in your approach. But I have found people to be quite reasonable, if you explain why you need to charge a fee to cover your costs, and especially if you give it back on the contract (or something along those lines). Does that clarify things for you?
@@levelupstrategies Thanks for the detailed reply. I should have clarified, I would be the client in this situation. I'm happy to front a few hundred bucks to be vetted as you described in your video, but in terms of initial screening coming from the perspective of the client, for example: I've found it's very hard to get even basic info about their typical assemblies, and from what I've been told, it's better to go with a builder who has experience executing the details that I'm interested in. A lot of them want a site address and $3,000 to do a feasibility study before they'll answer this question. I don't have any interest in any builder who only does cavity insulated 2x6 walls without ventilated rainscreens, and it doesn't seem like a huge ask to get this info, but maybe I do have to offer up a few hundred bucks for it. But a few thousand? So far I've asked this two ways A) "Can you describe from interior to exterior your typical wall assembly?" or B) "On your last project what was the wall assembly like?" Usually I don't get an answer, so maybe I'm going about this wrong. There are a small minority of builders who just put this stuff on their website, so that's nice. I thought about phrasing it as a yes-no question e.g. "Do you build with continuous external insulation, and have you ever done 10 inches of it?"
@@tubulartuber Ahh.. That makes a lot more sense. Thank you for clarifying. The unfortunate reality is that your questions don't extend much to the builder to bite on to, and will likely be ignored by anyone who is busy, or assumes that you are kicking tires, or require a lot of eduction. It's ok to learn, and lean into professionals to help, but it will serve you to present yourself in a way that invites a response. My favourite resource for learning how to ask questions is Chris Voss. (Book - never split the difference) I always try to frame my questions to get at NO from the person I am asking. Ex. Would you mind helping me? ( No- oriented question). vs. Can you help me? (Yes- oriented question) To answer your question specifically about details. I would start by framing yourself as a keen and motivated colleague and potential client. - Clarity and presence in your writing is key. Ex. Hello, I really care about high-performance construction. Choosing the right builder for my (new home/ Renovation/ project) is very important to me. Do you mind if I ask you a few questions about your projects? It will be hard for a serious professional to ignore that sort of question, unless they self-disqualify because they don't care about high-performance construction. In subsequent questions you can clarify with your understanding/goals. Ex. I am looking to build using fully exterior insulation & rain screen. Do you have any experience with this sort of wall assembly? (if they say NO - thats good clarification for you that they are not experienced). Follow up question: - Would you mind sharing some portfolio work from other high-performance projects where you did exterior insulation? Beyond that - offer respect - to build trust, and take the lead with money. Most professionals aren't afraid of helping, they are afraid of getting taken advantage of or wasting time. Ex. I recognize your time is important, and I have some questions that are important to me when I am choosing a builder. I would be willing to pay a modest fee to respect your time, and get some clarification on your typical building practices so see if we are aligned for the project I am considering. Would you be opposed to scheduling a call / teams meeting / coffee? - My guess is that most professionals would not charge you anything if you take the lead on gesturing respect for their time and expertise. Let me know how it goes, and thanks for taking the time to ask!
I am designing my house right now. I have looked into passive. One major concern is the amount of capital CO2 in higher step and passive houses. Some of the research I reviewed claims that 60 to 85% of the CO2 emissions comes from the materials used and construction. So even if you produce zero CO2 in the running of the house, it still has a big CO2 footprint. A passive house uses more material and takes more time to construct which increases an already high initial footprint. You can go with mainly wood products like Gutex and Accoya to act as a CO2 sink but similar products are not produced locally. The materials are expensive to start with and have high shipping costs which also reduces the CO2 sink. I think local producers have to start manufacturing products locally to cut shipping and material costs. I am still not sure if passive house is the right way to go but I guess you have to start somewhere. I priced out Gutex, CLT, and Accoya. You are looking at a premium in the order of $400 000CDN for a 2500 sq ft house. So it is currently out of the picture without some major grant.
The carbon capital conversation is largely a distraction from the more important element of an efficient house. One example I use, is of course ceramic dishware used more carbon to produce and deliver to your home than plastic/paper plates. You still probably don't rely on disposable dishware. If you extended the carbon footprint of a dishwasher into that equation, one could be convinced the better thing to do is just continue to use paper plates. Really, it's just a small upfront cost in doing business. Those things should be lower, and will get lower, but it shouldn't hold you back.
@@ShortVersion1 The problem with the analogy is that the construction of the house is 60 to 85% of the life cycle carbon. If you don't use carbon sink materials when constructing a passive house, the increased carbon foot print is more than the carbon produced for heating/cooling a typical house over the life cycle. In your analogy, the plastic and paper ware consumes more resources than the production of the ceramic dishware and that is generally not the case for a passive house. If the goal is to reduce carbon, you need to use materials that consume carbon and those materials are generally not that readily available or economically viable in North America. We have to have things like Gutex and Accoya shipped from long distances at really high costs. CLT is just really expensive.