advice for multifamily frame retrofit
Last Post 15 Feb 2010 03:16 PM by Dana1. 14 Replies.
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BissetiUser is Offline
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07 Feb 2010 11:09 PM
Hello,
I need guidance on parameters for designing my energy system on a vacant 6 unit apartment building. 

The 1907 house is framed in rough cut 2x4s, has vinyl siding, and a few layers of shingle, thin styrofoam..   It presently has no insulation.  My plan is to insulate the house from inside, install a solar hot water system, and the best heating system I can afford.

Radiant in the whole building seems out of reach.  Beyond the expense, tt would involve tearing out nice floors or going over them, breaking fine plaster work etc...  It may be more feasible on the 1st floor in a between floor joist installation. 

Can anyone offer a suggestion regarding:

Is blow in cellulose a good solution for 2x4 plaster walls?  If not what would be better for intact walls?

If radiant is out (??), what is the next best solution for hydronic heating?  Radiators, what kind, low temp high temp?  Baseboard?  Radiant wall?

Should I try to integrate the solar input into the heating system or just keep it for the DHW?

In my case (solar input, 6 units, a combination of radiant and other hydronics) what would be a suggestion for the array of boiler/tankless/hot water tanks (the less machines the better), keeping in mind that I will need to meter the energy use (otherwise people open windows in january...)?

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. 





Bob IUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 09:16 AM
Bisseti: That really can't be answered until you know the heat loss & infiltration factors in the building, and maybe until have finished insulating and air sealing the house. You can have blower door tests done on the house now to get a starting point and have asome analysis done based on insulating and air sealing to a certain point. Keep in mind that up to half of the heat loss in the house may be related to air infiltration, so you should devote a lot of effort into sealing the envelope. Look for holes into the building from the basement, seal the rim joist/sill area, pull up the attic floor & seal all the penatrations into the attic, weatherstrip all the exterior doors and windows. Good luck with the project.
Bob Irving
RH Irving Homebuilders
Certified Passive House Consultant
BissetiUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 09:49 AM
Thank you for your suggestion.  The thing is I need to design the heating system now, AS IF I've done whatever I can within my budget to seal the envelop of the house.  I won't be able to do actual test because I need to design then run electric and plumbing before insulating.

My plan for insulating the envelope:
-close holes near sil and in attic
- insulate 2x4 exterior walls with blown in cellulose or demin and, where open, r13 bats, followed by 5x8 drywall
-insulate attic with 12 inches of blown in cellulose
- insulate basement with R20 bats
-insulate ceiling of 1st and second floor with blown in insulation
-all new replacement and in some place new construction windows  (on south side use glass with higher solar heat gain)
The building is approximately 6000 square feet

Each unit is about 900 square feet the remainder is hallways.

I do have the option of tearing off the 2nd and 3rd floor ceilings but unless I get a huge efficiency (radiant possibility plus better insulation) I dont want to do this.  There's really nice one inch thick clay plaster on the ceilings. 

The heating should be zoned in three for each unit.

If anyone has suggestions for how best to seal this building or recommendations on best hydronic heating for my situation appreciated!!









Bruce FreyUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 11:00 AM
Some questions:

Where is the building located?

How is it currently heated?

Does each unit have it's own electrical service?

How do you intend to write the leases with respect to utilities and operating expenses...i.e., who pays what?

Are there any local regulations regarding utility metering (i.e., heating water) by the landlord (as compared to a utility)?

Bruce
BissetiUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 01:04 PM
Thanks for your reply Bruce.

Where is the building located? Jersey City, NJ

How is it currently heated? No heat.  The building's been abandoned.  The previous system was one of natural gas space heaters.   Natural gas service by PSE&G.

Does each unit have it's own electrical service?  Yes, they will.

How do you intend to write the leases with respect to utilities and operating expenses...i.e., who pays what?  That's open still, but I'm leaning toward everybody paying their own, sinse this is about the only this that inspires the average person to conserve!  Typically landlords pay the building's cold water use \and tenants pay electric and gas (for DHW and heat).

Are there any local regulations regarding utility metering (i.e., heating water) by the landlord (as compared to a utility)?
  No.
Dana1User is Online
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08 Feb 2010 04:35 PM
If it's plaster & lath in OK condition, dense-packing cellulose done from the inside works fine. Dense-packing will dramatically reduce air infiltration through the walls and adds thermal mass to the building, and will only require 1 hole per stud bay to patch per floor.

There is NO payback on radiant (comfortable, yes, efficient, sometimes, but economical from a fuel savings POV, not so much.) To be able to run high efficiency boilers, designing it with sufficient baseboard for to deliver the heat at 140F peak water temps (design-day, coldest hours of the heating season) and using the boiler's outdoor reset function delivers better than 90% true efficiency, and will be quite economical up front. If there's sufficient wall length to be able to do it with 125F water & baseboards it'll deliver better than 95% using outdoor reset control.

A single boiler & indirect water heater will be cheaper than 6, and the heat load for any single unit will likely be small relative to even the smallest condensing boilers, but it will be difficult or impossible to meter them separately if you go that route. A single larger boiler using a "reverse indirect" /heat exchanger like the( made in NJ) ErgomaxE44 (or it's Everhot or TurboMax cousins of similar size) would be able to handle the DHW load for 6 units fairly easily. Whether or not you'll want to use it as the heating system buffer depends on what your heating system water temps end up being. If possible, using drainwater heat recovery heat exchangers can boost both DHW output performance and save fuel. Using it as a heating system buffer means you're limited to ~90% efficiency with a modulating condensing boiler but since you're micro-zoning it into 3x6=18 separate zones, it'll at least DELIVER that efficiency, whereas you'd need to add separate buffer mass to most of the micro-zones to get optimum efficiency out of it even if you used 6 separate boilers. Alternatively a separate boiler to serve DHW with a reverse-indirect, and a outdoor-reset controlled buffer/hydraulic separator for the condensing boiler on the heating system could get you down to two boilers, and run at somewhat higher efficiency. Sizing the boilers properly for the true loads is HUGE in terms of being able to maximize the system efficiency. Many are oversized 2-3,even 4x for the whole building's heat load, then trying to serve a 1/18th of the building the thing is constantly cycling on/off, blowing away valuable heat with every start & finish flue purge. With a 50-100gallon buffer tank to work on it'll average the zone calls out, and the boiler will cycle far fewer times.

This is an issue whether you have a single boiler whole-building approach or a 6-boiler/3-zones per boiler approach. The latter can still work at 90% efficiency with a single wall-mounted ~50-60kbtu/hr condensing boiler + indirect-fired hot water system per unit.

Don't ignore the basement/foundation- sealing and insulating the band-joist & sill and the wall at least down to the frost line will reduce the stack-effect infiltration significantly. Make that basement as absolutely air-tight as possible, since it can be as much as 20-25%% of the total heat load of the building if unsealed & uninsulated. This will have a much larger impact on the building's fuel use than solar hot water.

No matter whether it's mid-efficiency cast-iron or condensing boilers, the lowest possible operating temperature results in the lowest fuel use/highest efficiency. If going the cast-iron route, mid-efficiency boilers should be sealed-combustion/direct vent types whenever possible for both safety & as-used efficiency. (If you're using heated air as combustion air, it's inducing higher infiltration and blowing away 1-3% of the heat, a factor not measured in an AFUE test.) Even for non-condensing units you'll save roughly 3% in fuel for every 10F you can drop the water temperature down to a lower limit of ~140F (below which you have to be very careful to protect the boiler from condensation damage to the heat exchangers). In the bad old days systems were designed for 160-180F water to save on radiator area, but with high-output baseboard and panel radiators rare is the system than actually NEEDs 180F water, even on the coldest hours of the year. The radiation has to be specified room by room, but you can usually get to 140F pretty easily in mid-atlantic type of outdoor design temps.

Separate blower-door tests on the different units will likely stop the bulk of the whole-building's air infiltration, but once that's been done the most economical extent, if there is a common entrance & stairwell, etc, run a blower door test there as well.

Solar preheat to the building can work, but would require a lot of plumbing for separate feeds to the distribution plumbing for hot & cold water, unless you take the single reverse-indirect approach and run it in series with the reverse indirect, and between the drainwater heat recovery and the reverse-indirect, if you go with drainwater heat recovery. If it's all ahead of 6 separate hot water heaters, the benefits reaped will be very uneven between users (those who bathe in the afternoon/early evening will use most of the solar heat, those who bathe in the AM get squat), but that's a separate issue.

I'm not sure if there's an easy solution to peops opening windows in winter, but with 3 zones per unit with their own thermostats it's a far cry from the typical whole-building central steam heating systems where some folks are roasting so they open the windows, causing negative air pressure to cool off the units on floors below, etc. That's not to say they WON'T open the windows, but they won't have to in order to stay comfortable.
jonrUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 08:17 PM
Given that flow and temperatures are fairly easy to measure, why "difficult or impossible to meter them separately", ie,  measure BTU delivered to each tenant?

greentreeUser is Offline
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08 Feb 2010 08:33 PM
If you are going to meter utilities to the tennants, which you should, why would you install advanced systems with longer paybacks.

I can understand ones own home, but you are talking about taking an investment property and making it a worse investment.
Bruce FreyUser is Offline
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09 Feb 2010 10:05 AM
If each unit will have a separate electrical service, have you considered mini splits for heating and cooling?  I don't know what possibilities, if any, there are to run ductwork, but it may be worth considering.  They are quite efficient until it gets really cold.  You also have the bonus of offering AC, although it may not be important to you or the tenants.

If you do go with a boiler and want to meter each tenant separately, you can do this reasonably inexpensively with flow meters and a weblogger (see the geothermal forum and search for weblog).  The concept here is that you want to allocate 100% of your heating utility costs when you are 100% occupied.  Assuming your primary fuel will be gas, that cost is easily identified.  If you want include the cost of pumping, it adds a bit of complexity and and another weblog point.   You could even add make up water and the cost of any water treatment.  You take all the costs you want to include and bill them proportionally to the tenants based on their metered use.

They do make BTU meters, but they are expensive and you don't need them....and then how would you calculate the cost/BTU?

The important point is that you will need to describe this utility billing structure in the lease.  The reason I asked if there are any regulations govening tenant utilities is that in some places landlords are not permited to "sell" or "re-sell" utilities.

Office building leases are usually "net", meaning that the tenants pay a base rent plus operating expenses which are either metered or billed pro-rata based on the rentable area.

Bruce

Dana1User is Online
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10 Feb 2010 01:44 PM
Posted By greentree on 08 Feb 2010 08:33 PM
If you are going to meter utilities to the tennants, which you should, why would you install advanced systems with longer paybacks.

I can understand ones own home, but you are talking about taking an investment property and making it a worse investment.

Exactly.

But if it's a "heat included" deal you can charge more rent, size the radiation & water temperatures with very small margins such that it won't keep up on cold nights with the windows open, use half the fuel of the typical multifamily heating plants, and it can still be a good deal for tenants and landlords alike.

You might be able to get away with a bunch of minisplits in this location but it's by no means a no brainer, and the upfront cost would be quite a bit more than a 1-2 boiler (or cogenerator) heating plant solution.  Electricity rates are significantly higher than the national average, and the average low temps Dec.-February are below where most are kicking into resistance heating back for hours on end nearly every night. Separate ~80% combustion-efficiency gas combi heat/hot water systems would be cheaper to run, with similar up-front expense.

But clearly the decision to combine or split heating systems has to be made early.

smartwallUser is Offline
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12 Feb 2010 08:14 PM
What about air conditioning
BissetiUser is Offline
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13 Feb 2010 01:48 AM
Thank you for all your responses here. 

I'll looking into the feasibility of the flowmeter for central heating plan option. But I am leaning away from the idea of administering the system myself.  

So. it's looking like 6 separate systems choosing between:
 6 boilers in the basement on a closed loop with radiators and baseboard plus a tankless heater in each unit's utility closet for dhw. 

or

6 boilers with indirect fire HW heaters in the basement

or

6 combi boilers in the basement

My budget is 4-6k per unit for the heating system. 

Can anyone recommend a configuration based on my budget?

Any thought on a reliable boiler product in my case (50/60kbtu)? 

Dana or others: would a solar (6 collector array) and/or wastewater pre-heat be possible with any of these options?  (If I do do solar I will need to figure out some way to recover that cost...  I know its not a great investment in my case, but I'm really amazed by the solar thermal technology and if I can afford it want to inspire others to take advantage...)

Does anyone have recommendations on radiator brands/types or the benefits of radiator vs baseboard?

Also Dana, in insulating the basement, were you recommending to dig down on the exterior of the building ("at least to frost line") or were you referring to insulating the interior of the stone foundation? 

About ac I am looking at those split models, but not considering them as a heat source. 

Thank you all!






BissetiUser is Offline
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13 Feb 2010 11:50 AM
One more idea for a system:

a solar tank plus a large tankless for all the building's hot water.  We'd pay for tenant's hot water, charge a bit more rent and recoup some of our investment in the solar thermal. 

The gas going to the boilers would be sub metered and the tenants would pay for that gas.

This would have the added benefit of avoiding the "no heat or hot water" problem...and would reduce the number of machines we need by 5.  

Maybe this is the best option?


Best,
Bisseti
Bruce FreyUser is Offline
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13 Feb 2010 04:36 PM
Posted By Bisseti on 13 Feb 2010 11:50 AM
One more idea for a system:

The gas going to the boilers would be sub metered and the tenants would pay for that gas.



I think submetering gas will likely be problematic from a (economical) technical standpoint. 

Can your utility provide separate meters and separate services for the tenants....same as electrictricity?  What do you do for heating the common areas?

How active (or passive) do you want to be in the management?

Bruce
Dana1User is Online
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15 Feb 2010 03:16 PM
For $6K/unit you should be able to get a sealed combustion side-vented 85-86% efficiency ~60-70MBH unit that fits in a closet and a 30 gallon indirect for hot water + a single zone balanced-radiation baseboard. (Something like the smallest in the Burnham SCG series or Weil McLain CGS series.) If you start breaking it up in to micro-zones it adds another circulation pump valve & zone relay or zone valve and some complexity to the control/plumbing, and it'll short-cycle for sure.

For closer to $4K/unit you can probably get a ~80% combustion-efficient Bradford White Combi-Cor( M-2-C-TW-50T10BN or M2-C-75T10CN, depending on how much hot water you'd need) and micro-zone it. The thermal mass of the tank keeps it from short-cycling, and it'll be no less efficient than a standard tank during the summer (mid-50s for EF ratings.) There may be code-issues with combis in rentals in some areas, not sure if that applies to NJ.

If you design the radiation to deliver design-day heat at 130-140F (typically it means about 50% more baseboard) the additional upfront cost won't be much, but it'll save 10-12% on fuel relative to a high temp system. Cast iron radiators or flat-panel Euro radiators are more comfortable but are outside your cost constraints.

For insulating the foundation, if it's flat enough you can use rigid-board XPS, but on many stone foundations it's easier to use closed-cell spray foam insulation, up to 2". The below-grade portion needs to be able to dry toward the interior, which limits you to ~R10-R13, but that should be fine in that climate zone. It then needs at least 1/2" of wallboard or similar as a thermal barrier to meet fire code. A steel stud 2x3" studwall 24" o.c. on the interior works.

Drainwater heat recovery on the main drains, with the potable side in-series with the water feed to the units works. It'll be a grand or more per heat exchanger (installed), but if drains are commoned in the basement you can feed more than one unit with the output. The output of the heat exchanger will make the cold water coming in more like room-temp when someone is taking a shower, but it'll have better energy- return per $/investment than solar. If it's more than one unit per heat exchanger be sure to pay close attention to the specs for pressure drop with flow (some are better than others. PowerPipe looked better in that regard than the competition when I was looking, but it's a moving target- the industry is still innovating- they have competition. ) As single heat exchanger will typically return 20-40 therms/year per showering person, and if the plumbing location and water pressure issues work in your situation you could probably put as many as three units on a single heat exchanger. At higher flows the return efficiency drops, but doesn't fall off a cliff. (If it gets 50% heat recovery at 2.5gpm flow, it'll still be 40%+ at 8gpm.)
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