Conservation Of A Historic Building Through Sympathetic Thermal Enhancement
Price
Free (open access)
Transaction
Volume
153
Pages
10
Page Range
633 - 642
Published
2015
Size
1,212 kb
Paper DOI
10.2495/STR150531
Copyright
WIT Press
Author(s)
J. Stinson, J. Bros Williamson, A. Reid, J. Currie
Abstract
This paper documents research undertaken by the Scottish Energy Centre at Edinburgh Napier University to refurbish a historic library building by means of thermal improvements. The interventions selected were specifically chosen to minimalise any impact on the architectural integrity of the building.
The study involved thermally enhancing the ceiling using a hygroscopic insulation material (200mm wood fibreboards). The objective was to measure the thermal transmittance and hygrothermal performance of the building, both pre and post intervention, with the aim of reducing heat loss without causing condensation problems.
The research demonstrated that, through the use of a modern, natural insulation material, the thermal transmittance (U-value) was reduced from 1.3 to 0.2 (W/m2K) – reducing the buildings energy consumption and associated carbon emissions, but most importantly conserving thermal comfort and preserving the buildings literary content. The hygrothermal analysis showed that the natural, vapour permeable insulating material altered the hygrothermal profile of the attic space. Extended monitoring of this environment detected conditions for one prolonged condensation episode However; visual surveys suggest that the hygroscopic insulation material acted to mitigate any detrimental effects of condensation build-up.
Keywords
conservation, preservation, historic building, retrofit, thermal, hygrothermal