Home Inspection FYI

Providing Help, Knowledge and Other Useful Information To Home Owners Everywhere

Home Inspection FYI - Providing Help, Knowledge and Other Useful Information To Home Owners Everywhere

Styrofoam Homes FYI

Styrofoam Homes

While Styrofoam may be most commonly associated with meat trays and disposable coffee cups, the material is considered by many to be a residential building material for Styrofoam homes.

Communities composed entirely of Styrofoam™ are already a reality in progressively minded Japan. These structures have been approved by Japan’s Land and

styrofoam dome home Styrofoam Homes FYITransport Ministry, and, with the proper permit, they can be erected anywhere in that country, where they are known as “dome homes.”

Prefab home manufacturers use the material to construct easy-to-assemble, igloo-shaped modular kit homes. The Aso Farm Land resort village in Kyushu is one notable instance, where 480 Styrofoam™ domes serve as lodging, recreational facilities and retail shops. They are built from 7-inch thick, snap-together wall sections made from a type of Styrofoam™ that is considerably stronger than ordinary packing foam. Dome house kits start at around $30,000, and this price does not include the cost of transport or assembly.

Manufacturers of dome homes boast the following advantages over homes built with wood or metal:

  • They do not rust, decay or attract termites. It’s still wise to have an InterNACHI inspector search for such defects.
  • They are earthquake-resistant. In fact, models tested by the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) did not merely meet earthquake standards; they remained fully intact after being shaken harder than the strongest earthquakes ever recorded. Styrofoam™ houses can withstand typhoons, too.
  • The walls are treated with a flame retardant that emits no toxic fumes during a fire.
  • Construction is quick and easy. The prefabricated pieces, which each weigh about 175 pounds, can be carried by two or three people and assembled in a few hours.
  • They have excellent thermal-insulation properties, resulting in higher energy efficiency and lower heating and cooling costs. Tests performed by the FAS found that Styrofoam™ can cut heating and cooling costs by 50% to 60%, in some cases.

Even in the United States, where dome homes are still the stuff of hobbits and smurfs, Styrofoam™ homes have passed uniform building code standards, and they represent a growing niche market. In Hawaii, for instance, entire conventional multi-story homes – not Japanese-style dome homes – are being constructed from Styrofoam™. The ceiling, stairs, walls, support beams and roof of such a home are constructed with cement-coated Styrofoam™ and lack straps, tie-downs, nuts and bolts. Even the gutters are cut into the foam, and everything conforms to the building code. According to the manufacturer, these homes are cooler than homes made from conventional building materials, and they cost 10% less to construct.

Another growing market in the United States is homes that are built from a concrete-foam hybrid. The result is a synergy of the insulative capability of Styrofoam™ and the strength of a standard building material. The foam provides continuous insulation, as opposed to traditional insulation that has a break at every wood stud. The technique is about 3% to 5% more expensive for new-home construction.

FINAL FYI, Styrofoam™ is emerging as a promising building material for residences.

McMansions and Energy Inefficiency

McMansions

McMansions” are multi-story houses with no clear architectural style, and judged to be pretentious or poorly designed for its neighborhood. Among the major drawbacks of McMansions are wasteful energy-inefficiency.

mcmansion McMansions and Energy Inefficiency

Along with the expanding size of American cars, meals, televisions and waistlines, houses have gotten much bigger over the years, as well. The average American home swelled from 983 square feet in 1950 to 1,500 square feet in 1970, and to 2,349 square feet in 2004, according to the National Association of Home Builders. Other countries have seen similar growth.  The Australian government reports that the average size of a new house increased by 40% between 1984 and 2003, going from 162.2 square meters (approximately 1,745 square feet) to 227.6 square meters (approximately 2,450 square feet). And not only are the houses getting larger, but everything inside them is getting bigger, too. Multiple heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems are becoming commonplace. And two- and three-zone heating systems are becoming a standard feature.

The History of McMansions

At the extreme end of this progression are the so-called “McMansions” — also known as “Hummer Houses,” “Garage Mahals” and “Starter Castles” – which exploded onto the real estate market during the housing boom of the 1990s. McMansions attempt those with lesser means with the opportunity to live a life of glamorized opulence traditionally limited to the rich and famous. Years of record-low interest rates and aggressive marketing of upscale homes encouraged more people than ever before to stake their claim at a supersized version of the American Dream, McMansions.

McMansions emphasize interior space. Typically, McMansions have a floor area over 4,000 square feet (280 m2), ceilings 9 to 10 feet high, a two-story portico, huge staircases, two or more garages with oversized doors, room-sized walk-in closets, and a family room with a vaulted ceiling. Not uncommon is a front door hall with a chandelier hanging down 16 to 20 feet, an enormous master bedroom, and a spacious kitchen with a center island.

McMansions are inherently wasteful

However, as McMansions require a tremendous amount of raw materials to construct and extra energy to keep them running. McMansions seem starkly out of place in an era when homeowners are seeking to reduce their energy expenditure and using myriad tactics to meet this goal, from greenscaping and solar gardens, to hiring InterNACHI energy auditors. Specifically, McMansions pose the following environmental risks:

  • Vast tracts of land must be deforested in order to build unnecessarily large homes, threatening wildlife and reducing the biological absorption of greenhouse gasses. The math is startling: roughly 408 trees of 20-inch diameter and 42 feet of usable wood are required to build an 8,000-square-foot house (according to the Idaho Forest Products Commission), and for every 10 such homes that are built, more than 7 acres of forest must be cleared (assuming 9-foot by 9-foot tree spacing, according to a formula by the University of Georgia).
  • Concrete is required to make foundations, which are correspondingly large in McMansions. Concrete production consumes energy and contributes to greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Inordinately high energy consumption is another drawback. While McMansions may be grand looking, the high ceilings and huge foyers are difficult to heat and cool. Indoor pools, exercise rooms and living spaces with elevated ceilings all contribute to the need to construct power plants and increase dependency on fossil fuels.
  • Toxic building materials, such as some types of paint and vinyl, are used in greater quantities than are required in typical homes. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, vapors or volatile organic compounds in paint can cause serious health problems.

While McMansion owners may discover efficient ways to heat and cool their homes by hiring an InterNACHI-certified energy auditor, whole communities have taken actions to limit the potential energy expenditure of these giant homes. Consider the following two examples:

  • In Marin County, California, any homeowner with a home of over 4,000 square feet must fill out a green-building checklist. The larger the home, the more it must conform to standards of energy efficiency.
  • In Pitkin County, Colorado, if a new home is larger than 5,000 square feet, the builder must either provide on-site renewable energy (such as wind turbines or solar panels), or pay a $5,000 fee to the Colorado Office of Resource Efficiency, which will use the money for renewable energy projects elsewhere. Such homes’ energy consumption is watched, too, and if it exceeds predetermined limits, the owner must purchase electricity from the Renewable Energy Mitigation Program.

 

In summary, McMansions are exorbitantly large, environmentally unfriendly homes which may be falling out of fashion as homeowners and even whole communities strive for energy efficiency.


//
//