This website uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some of these cookies are used for visitor analysis, others are essential to making our site function properly and improve the user experience. By using this site, you consent to the placement of these cookies. Click Accept to consent and dismiss this message or Deny to leave this website. Read our Privacy Statement for more.
NFRC News Now
Blog Home All Blogs

What Does Fenestration Look Like in a Zero Net Energy World?

Posted By Duane Jonlin, Seattle Energy Code Advisor, Monday, October 4, 2021

Last week I saw a bumper sticker on a huge black SUV: “There’s more to life than gas mileage.” This is true. While fenestration is responsible for a great deal of energy use (solar gain in summer, heat loss in winter, air infiltration around frames), the daylight and connection to the outdoors that windows provide is essential for our health and well-being.

Another thing that’s important for our health and well-being is mitigating the accelerating effects of climate change, and super-efficient buildings are the easiest way to do that. However, some commenters worry that constructing zero net energy buildings will mean living with “… tiny little windows, little windows so you can’t see out, can’t see the light,” to quote a recent president.

To keep from being stuck with those “little tiny windows,” we all know some performance boosts like warm edge spacers, thermal breaks, and fourth-surface low-e coatings. Beyond that, talk of triple glazing always raises hackles, but alternative technologies are emerging. LBNL has developed a “thin triple,” inserting a very thin center pane in the thickness of a typical double-pane unit. Vacuum insulated glass and several varieties of dynamic glazing are emerging. While these newer options might be beyond typical project budgets today, glazing is inevitably going to get more complex, and it’s essential to have NFRC keeping track of how all these perform.

For an entire century, architects have dreamed of buildings that are all glass, wall to wall and floor to ceiling, which turns out to be good for magazine covers but not much else. Strategic sizing and placement of glazing to optimize energy as well as comfort, daylight, and views for the occupants will require breaking out of the old all-glass mentality, which itself might require a new generation of architects. To quote Mark Frankel: “That which exists must be possible,” so if you want to see what the Zero Net Energy future looks like, start by checking out the hundreds of ZNE buildings that already exist, and then make your own even better.


Information on some of the new technologies may be found in the NFRC "Emerging Trends and Technology" webinar series. Visit the NFRC store for the titles and access to the webinars

 

Tags:  architecture  building code  buildings  carbon footprint  carbon neutral  Emerging TrendsNFRC ratings  energy efficient  Fenestration  industry  Seattle  technologies  window technologies  windows 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Building Official Encourages Early Energy Efficiency Planning for Code Compliance

Posted By Adriana Vargas, National Fenestration Rating Council, Tuesday, February 16, 2021

It was June 2003, and the newly installed chief building official of Parker, Colo., stood before a room of builders to deliver a message he knew they wouldn’t like. But Gil Rossmiller also knew they’d come around. He had a plan for energy efficiency, and wouldn’t need much money to make it happen. Rossmiller wanted them to think differently about buildings – as a system of integrated pieces, that interact with each other, and would do it best if designed in a specific sequence. He cited an example: when builders design air-conditioning systems without first picking the windows and calculating a building’s thermal envelope, they’re doing it wrong. He knew they could boost energy efficiency, add comfort, and save money.

Rossmiller went on to private consulting, currently with Shums Coda Associates, but left Parker, a Denver suburb of 55,000, with a method to ensure efficient energy use in buildings and a group of local builders who support it.

“We took logical steps, integrated them with existing processes, and learned together with our builders,” Rossmiller said. “Energy code enforcement is now just a part of the process like any other building code.”

These are steps most American municipalities have yet to take, he said – energy codes aren’t as well understood and complied with as other parts of the International Code Council’s International Building Code (IBC). For windows, doors, and skylights, also known as fenestration products, that’s in part because of an assumption that an energy-performance label from the National Fenestration Ratings Council (NFRC) affixed to a newly installed window is typically all that’s required for compliance. But the reality is that energy efficiency requires early planning at the design phase. And whilst leaders work toward top-down solutions for compliance, that’s not the only way to drive efficiency– consumers demand it. Efficiency isn’t just a best-practice ideal. It’s also good for business. 

Rossmiller first understood that when he was a builder himself. After working in construction, and then as a private-sector building inspector for a company providing that service to municipalities, he worked in the 2000s as a systems-improvement manager for a local builder struggling with moisture issues in its houses.

“We came look at a house as a system, and that you can’t change one thing in the system without impacting other parts of it,” he said.

Fenestration was central to the challenge for compliance. Rossmiller and colleagues realized they were designing HVAC systems too early in the process. By committing to first calculating a house’s overall thermal envelope, including the fenestration factor, they realized that they could cut HVAC capacity by half, and that solved the moisture problem.

“Customer callbacks for comfort issues practically disappeared,” Rossmiller said.

He took these lessons with him when he became Parker’s chief – and only -- building official in 2003. He aimed to boost efficiency through a greater awareness of and compliance with the International Energy Conservation Code, one element of the IBC. Rossmiller convened builders working in Parker for training sessions given for free by product suppliers, for goods such as house wrap and insulation.

Together, he and builders learned more about defining a building’s thermal envelope, such as considering whether crawlspaces, attics, and HVAC ductwork would be placed inside or outside that envelope. They then moved on to other elements of the building process, and Rossmiller gave buildings time for adaptation before enforcement. By 2006, most of those builders were producing houses at least 15 percent more efficient, and often qualifying for ENERGY STAR® status.

“They resisted at first, but many later told me they’ll never go back to the old ways,” Rossmiller said.

Municipalities that follow the international family of building codes, and make clear that what will be inspected, will eventually find that training and inspection becomes less necessary over time.

Targeting efficiency is increasingly easy, Rossmiller said, given the natural improvements vendors make to their windows, doors, house wrap, and other materials. And code inspectors today have more tools, especially on-site. When Rossmiller was a young code inspector, he’d have to do longhand math on paper during inspections and didn’t have a smartphone available to look up code specifics. This combination of improved products and readily-available technical information should help today’s young building inspectors to better understand what they see in the field, and also create an opportunity to simplify and clarify the building codes themselves.

 

KEY TAKEAWAYS

-Building energy-efficient buildings means following a sequence. For fenestration, it’s important to remember that picking products and calculating a building’s thermal envelope comes before designing an HVAC system.

-Using building codes to drive efficiency is a slow process of small steps, at least in early stages, to establish widespread support

-Municipal building departments should have an energy-code champion, to serve as a knowledge base and support for staff and contractors. That person should develop a timeline for compliance, and ensure that both staff and contractors are on the same page before taking a next step. 

 

Tags:  building code  code enforcement  Compliance  construction  energy efficiency  fenestration  green building  HVAC 

PermalinkComments (0)
 
About Us

The National Fenestration Rating Council (NFRC) is the trusted, independent, nonprofit certification body for the energy performance of windows, doors, and skylights. With more than 35 years of expertise, NFRC is the standard-bearer in fenestration performance certification, providing the public with objective data that helps stakeholders make informed decisions about product and building performance. NFRC certification ensures that products are tested using precise, scientifically validated methods, resulting in ratings that are fair, accurate and credible. Contact us at info@nfrc.org.

Connect With Us