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BobVila.com > Channels > Doors & Windows > All Articles > EnergyWise House: Using Windows to Beat the Heat EnergyWise House: Using Windows to Beat the Heat Here comes the sun! Properly planning a home's window layout can frame scenic vistas while preventing solar rays from pushing energy bills to the boiling point. Related Showrooms Sears - Custom-Fit Replacement Windows and Entry Doors ETO Doors - Shop for Interior & Exterior Doors - Lowest Price Guaranteed
Protecting against the sun makes big dollar sense. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, an average household spends over 40 percent of its total annual energy budget on heating and cooling costs. In South Florida, consumers may spend that much on cooling costs alone. These costs can be reduced by 15 percent on average just by switching to energy-efficient windows and planning for window placement, shading, and ventilation. Which Way to Turn First and foremost, homeowners need to pay attention to which direction their home is facing. The angle of the sun in the summer and the length of direct exposure are extreme on eastern- and westward-facing sides of the home. California-based energy expert Steve Easley explains how to avoid that beating sun, all while understanding that no one wants a blank wall with no windows. "Orient your glass so that it faces south," Easley says. "The sun is higher in the summer, so it hits the glass at less of a direct angle. Also avoid large amounts of glazing on the east and west faces where the sun will heat it at a direct angle for long periods of time." For a hot-climate home, battling the sun and controlling cooling costs are the critical focus for design and energy calculations. In some areas of the country, design reviews and approvals focus on a building's ability to control solar heat gain. Progressive review boards want to know the impact of solar heat gain on cooling loads, or how much energy it takes to reduce a home's temperature. These boards require strategies for reducing heat gain without overly consumptive energy use. Controlling energy use in hot climates means controlling heat gain. "When we created the Palm Springs EnergyWise House, we designed first for the views," says builder Dennis Cunningham of Palm Springs Modern Homes, "then we did the calculations to see if we could make it work. We were lucky with this project that the views were north-northwest. As a result, we don't get any beating sun."
Avoiding Heat Buildup Solar heat gain is the biggest energy enemy in homes throughout the country. Better to place picture windows, sliding doors, and soaring Palladian windows facing north and south than suffer the extreme heat gain large that windows looking east and west will bring. For a northern climate home, this approach has a secondary benefit in that south-facing windows will draw direct, home-warming rays during the winter months. No matter where a house is located, good window planning focuses on controlling solar heat gain during the summer months. If that same control can bring added warmth in the heating season, consider it a bonus. Easley uses a single-pane sliding-glass door as an example of how glass selection and placement can impact a home's cooling load and energy use. Direct sun on glass will generate 250 Btu per square foot of glazing an hour, the same unit of measurement used to gauge a furnace's output. For an average 6 foot by 7-foot sliding glass door, that makes 10,000 Btu an hour from the door alone. It would take nearly one ton of air conditioning power to compensate for this heat increase. Since an average home uses three tons of air conditioning per hour, the slider would be using one third of that cooling energy per hour. Solar heat gain happens everywhere, Easley points out. "Even in the Midwest you can still have air conditioning bills that cost as much as your heating bill, so never underestimate the impact of your glass," he says. Design Solutions
Smart Windows Another way to cut the solar heat gain from windows is to install high-efficiency coated windows that are designed to block heat transfer in the winter and the summer. Selecting a double-paned, low-e coated glass unit can save hundreds of dollars on yearly utility bills. Moving to a spectrally selective low-e glass in a double-paned insulated glass unit (IGU) will bring the greatest savings and efficiency of all. These windows have a microthin layer of metal that reflects heat back toward the source. Spectrally selective coatings deflect the rays that cause heat buildup and UV degradation, while allowing visible light to penetrate. "On average standard glass lets in 90 percent of the sun's heat. A standard low-e glass lets in about 70 percent. A spectrally coated glass lets in just 40 percent of the sun's heat," Easley says.
Energy-efficient windows work to keep unwanted heat out and to keep precious heat in, depending on the season. Heat energy always moves from high concentration to low, which is why windows draw heat from a room just like an ice cube draws heat out of a warm drink. Heat will always try to enter a cool house in the summer and escape from a warm house in the winter. Smart windows can block heat loss just as they block heat gain. The coatings on these specially treated glass units bounce heat back rather than letting it pass through. In cold weather spectrally coated glass works to radiate heat back into the room. So, a double-pane spectrally coated glass surface maintains a more constant temperature than single-pane glazing. As a result, it stays warmer and resists the heat transfer that is common to all window glazing. To maximize heating and cooling dollars, consider specially coated glazing in the most efficient window unit you can find. "Basically," Easley says, "buy the most energy-efficient product you can afford." It will provide savings in the long run. The EnergyWise House in an ongoing project that examines energy efficient building techniques, materials, and methods. For more information on the materials and companies participating in the project, see the EnergyWise House Video Resource Library. Copyright BobVila.com © 2001 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||