An Inside View of an Alaska Craftsman Home:
The Alaska State Fair House at the Palmer Fairgrounds, an ACHP
Demonstration Home
The Alaska State Fair House serves as a permanent exhibit, designed and
built with the latest in energy-efficient building technologies. It proves that
northern homes can be attractively designed and filled with natural light, while
still being energy-efficient. The ACHP Fair House was built with many different
methods of energy-efficient construction, not promoting any one specific product
or construction technique. This was done to show that there are many different
materials and construction techniques available for energy-efficient home
building.
There were sixteen different wall construction methods used within this
home. The south gable wall, and the east and west walls, are various stressed
skin panels. The remaining four wall sections are each wood-framed, using
different methods, with three different types of insulation within them.
The main roof is composed of stress skin panels. The two gables are
conventional framing with four different insulation combinations.
There are five types of windows throughout the house, with different glazings
and coatings, demonstrating varying R-values (R = resistance to heat flow).
As with all ACHP certified homes, a continuous vapor retarder was installed
within all exterior walls and the roof. This creates a very airtight structure
so that air leakage can be minimized and controlled. Controlled, mechanical
ventilation is necessary in energy-efficient construction for indoor air
quality, as well as to ensure the durability of the structure. In this home a
heat recovery ventilator (HRV) was utilized to fulfill the ventilation needs.
Stale indoor air, whether wet or dry, indicates that the home suffers from
insufficient fresh air circulation. Keeping air trapped inside the home allows
the build up of unhealthy air (including tobacco smoke, cooking fumes, airborne
allergens and volatile organic chemicals emitted by furniture, paint and floor
coverings). If the home is not airtight, though, uncontrolled air leaks in the
walls allow dust to collect on interior surfaces and serve as a path for water
vapor migration into the wall cavities. Because an ACHP home is built using
draft-free construction, with controlled, mechanical ventilation, there are none
of the health risks caused by poor indoor air quality nor the energy-loss and
structural risks caused by leaky walls. An ACHP home has warm, fresh air
year-round, with controlled humidity levels.
All of these features, along with the alarm system, a control system for
monitoring the energy components, energy-efficient lighting, and water
conserving plumbing, are exhibited and displayed throughout the home.
The cost of heating this home with a high-efficiency gas heating system, for
a six-month period in 1991 was $245.68 (this was during the construction phase
and a plywood door was being used). For the following twelve-month period in
1991 - 1992, the bill was only $204.72.
What is in an ACHP Home?
- Advanced Framing Techniques
- Heat is always lost through a home's exterior walls because of the
conductivity of the materials the walls are built with. In an ACHP home, this
heat conduction is reduced by using higher levels of insulation and more
efficient structural assemblies. These techniques reduce heat transfer from the
heated interior to the cold outside.
- More Effective Insulation in Ceilings, Walls, and Floors
- Insulation with high R-values and more effective installation techniques
are both very important in cold climate homes. In the ACHP Fair House,
computer analysis helped to optimize the placement and installation of the
insulation materials used throughout the home.
- Draft-Free Construction
- Most homes the size of the ACHP Fair House have air leakage equaling a
five-square-foot hole in the wall. While some leakage is inevitable, the air
leakage in this ACHP home equals less than one square foot. The difference lies
in the continuous air/vapor retarder installed throughout the exterior envelope.
Each retarder seam laps and is sealed to the next, and is also sealed around
outlets, switches, and plumbing.
- Energy-Efficient Appliances
- Quite a number of advances have been made in this area. Many appliances
now use only one-third the energy used by appliances available a few years ago.
- High Quality Windows and Doors
- In heat loss terms, windows are holes in your home. Therefore, the better
your windows are, the better your home will perform. The ACHP Fair House has
windows that cut heat loss to half that of standard double pane windows. These
windows, in combination with proper home ventilation, will virtually eliminate
interior icing and condensation, even at subzero temperatures.
- Controlled Ventilation
- Air leakage is minimized in an energy-efficient house through the use of
continuous, sealed air/vapor retarders. It is important, though, that air move
throughout the home at an even rate. This way, one room does not become stale
while another is always drafty. The ACHP Fair House's balanced ventilation
system brings in fresh air, distributes it evenly throughout the home, and
exhausts the stale air. Through the use of an HRV, like the one installed in
this home, some of the heat from the outgoing air is extracted to warm the
incoming air.
- Efficient Heating Systems
- Without an efficient heating system, as much as 30% to 50% of your energy
dollars are going right up the chimney. High efficiency heating equipment can
reduce these chimney losses to 5%. In addition, all air that is used in the
combustion process is drawn from outside of the house to avoid sending your
heated interior air up the chimney. This also assures adequate venting of
combustion products and no backdrafting from combustion appliances.
The construction of this house was made possible by generous donations from
the following:
- Architects
- Glen G. Green, A.I.B.D. of Alaska Graphics
Ron Bissett, Architect of
Bissett / Simasko
- Displays
- Arctic Technical Services
Curtis Plumbing & Heating
Heat
Alaska, Inc.
Sitka Construction
- Doors
- Builders Millwork Supply / Hurd
- Foundation
- Alagco
All Alaska Enterprises
Anchorage Sand & Gravel
Consteel Company
Dow Chemical U.S.A.
Kenai Supply, Inc.
Spenard
Builders Supply
United Lumber Company, Inc.
- Insulation
- Certainteed Corporation
Dow Chemical U.S.A.
Manville
Sitka
Construction
Spenard Builders Supply
Thermo-Kool of Alaska, Inc.
Uresco Construction Materials, Inc.
- Framing
- Alchem, Inc.
APC International
Chugach Forest Products, Inc.
Palmer G. Lewis Company, Inc.
Spenard Builders Supply
Sto-Cote
Products, Inc.
- Mechanical
- Enstar Natural Gas Company
Moore Heating, Air Conditioning,
Refrigeration, Inc.
Lennox
- Monetary Contributions
- Matanuska Electric Association, Inc.
State of Alaska / DCRA
- Roofing
- ASC Pacific, Inc.
Kenai Supply, Inc.
Pacific Coast Building
Products
- Siding
- Belco, Inc.
Louisiana-Pacific
Spenard Builders Supply
- Electrical
- Temptrol
- Trucking
- All Alaska Enterprises
Carlile Enterprises, Inc.
- Windows
- All Weather Windows
Capitol Glass Company, Inc.
Insulate
Industries
NorthermWindows
Pozzi Windows*
Spenard Builders Supply
*with special glass
click here to
e-mail us at
achp@alaska.net
This site is developed and maintained by the staff of
the Alaska
Craftsman Home Program, Inc.
PO Box 241647
Anchorage, Alaska 99524
907/258-2247 Fax: 907/258-5352
Document Dated 11/06/2008 Copyright 1996-2000, The Alaska
Craftsman Home Program, Inc.