[Greenbuilding] passive solar homes - floors

Rob Tom ArchiLogic at yahoo.ca
Mon Jun 11 11:03:43 CDT 2007


On Mon, 11 Jun 2007 09:25:31 -0400, Lawrence Lile <LLile at projsolco.com>  
wrote:
[portions with which I agree <snipped> for brevity]

> Concrete floors are definitely hard on the feet.  FEELS cold If a  
> concrete floor is 80F, it still feels cool to the touch.


I think that people's perceptions of comfort vary considerably from the  
statement above.

Me ?

I have unheated concrete floors (or stone or porcelain tile over) and  
*always* go barefoot ... and like it.

I find that bare feet on a sun-warmed concrete floor in winter when it's  
cold enough outside to freeze the nuts off of an iron bridge is almost as  
delightful as showering from a rainbarrel outside in a summer breeze after  
a morning ride.

OTOH, I can't stand walking around barefoot on a hydronically-heated floor.
Too hot for me.

I'd say that if an unheated (but well-insulated) direct gain slab is  
deemed to FEEL cold to some bare-footed tenderfoot, that that cold-footed  
person might consider wearing socks and/or slippers so that the rest of us  
normal people (ie coolfoots) don't have to go around with our feet all  
scrunched-up in an attempt to minimise contact with an unnaturally hot  
floor.

And "no" I don't think that I'm just being a machoMooseHugger.
I have a 96 year-old living in my home who doesn't have any problem  
standing/walking/living on the unheated tiled concrete floors. But she  
doesn't go barefoot.

> Biggest common mistakes in solar:

In addition to LL-man's list I would add:

- Not enough attention paid to increasing levels of insulation and  
meticulous air-sealing
   and more often than not, throwing in way too much equator-facing glass  
instead.

- omitting properly scaled overhangs or other permanent shading devices to  
prevent unwanted gains during the summer months




=== * ===
Rob Tom
Kanata, Ontario, Canada
< A r c h i L o g i c  at   C h a f f Y a h o o  dot  C a  >
(winnow the chaff from my edress in your reply)




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