Posted By rkillough-miller on 23 Apr 2010 01:26 PM
We have pretty much what you are asking about: a highly insulated house (SIPS that are R-36 in the walls and R-45 in the roof), an ERV with radiant heat on the first floor and a Russian fireplace that heats the entire building on between 1 and 2 cords of wood a winter. (We live in Central Massachusetts). Radiant heat is the most comfortable form of heat I've ever experienced and the ERV gives us all the fresh air we want during the heating season. (We use the windows from late March through mid- Oct.) We live in a rural, heavily wooded area and have never had the need for AC in the 18 years we've lived here. However, we have the possiblity of using our geo-thermal heat pump to create cool air should summer temps rise in the future - climate crisis anyone?
My understanding is that (in our neck of the woods) if you can get an R-50 envelope for the house, you don't need ANY heat source (outside of appliances, human heat, etc.) Anybody know if this is accurate?
If my kid had his way, that crossover would happen at ~R25, given the number of computers, lights, and game machines left on!

But R50 isn't some magic number. With average central MA January temps of ~18-20F there is still a significant average heat load, and at 150-180watts per adult human body it would have to be a very small house with very few windows, and VERY tightly controlled ventilation for R50 to be the magic balance point.
The amount you get from appliances will vary a LOT with the efficiency & duty cycle of what you have. If you're the type that lights up the living areas with twenty 75 watt R30s for 7-8 hours/day, has a TIVO & 2 computers & a game machine on 24/365, and watch 4-5 hours of TV on the 52" plasma display, you probably don't need R50 walls to make a go of it. If you have all high-efficiency lighting controlled by motion sensors (or diligence of user), and spend your evenings under an 18W fluoro or LED reading lamp, and have all Energy Star appliances, of the smallest size that works for you, R50 is probably your baseline starting point.
Somewhere north of R30 in this climate, with sufficient interior thermal mass, insulation against the ~50F central MA subsoil, low enough and appropriately placed glazing, the bulk of space heating function can be reduced to managing solar gain & ventilation rates, which sounds like the house in this thread. R50 clear-wall R-values make this a lot easier to go with no heating system than the bare-minimum R30 required for space heating in high-solar-gain house. With higher R you gain you need ergo less glazing for even lower nighttime loss, etc. - you needn't live in the dark, but you can't have huge panoramic view of the neighborhood and not suffer losses at night & low-solar days.
The
PassiveHouse tools are allegedly pretty good at modeling designs based on site conditions & local weather history. Anybody serious about getting the most-bang/buck with superinsulation will likely save far more on materials than the software costs, provide they have time to use the tool properly.
With R36 SIPs you're already way ahead of the game, and if you have any solar exposure in your woodsy area, you may be able to optimize that envelope to take more advantage. But solarized or not, thermal bridging at structural elements is still an issue with SIP houses. Other oft overlooked details include air-sealing at the top of the foundation & insulating foundation walls (or slab-edges down at least to the frost line of slab-on-grade.) Foundation air-leakage & conducted heat losses can add up to literally half of the heat load of an R36 SIP house with a full basement. (A guy in my office has an R25 SIP house built in the 1980s with an uninsulated crawlspace foundation and a lot of oak post & beam structural stuff penetrating the envelope. His house is somewhat smaller than my not-so-insulated 1920s stick-built antique, yet uses more heating fuel than mine. Even before insulating the basement walls & sealing the sill I was using slightly less fuel, now it's something like 20% less. He even has better solar exposure than I do. With better air-sealing & foundation insulation he would likely be using 20% less than ME rather than the other way around.)