Sunday, March 13, 2011

insulation

Last winter/spring, phase 1 of our insulation plan — the rigid part of the insulation — was completed. Since that step was completed, we next framed the interior walls of the house, installed all the plumbing, electrical, and ductwork, and got everything ready for closing up those walls.

In November, just as we were getting prepared for moving out of our condo and *gasp* into our house, and making plans to attend my brother's wedding in the Yucatan in Mexico, we FINALLY wrapped up all the tasks for making insulation possible. Unfortunately, our timing wasn't so great and Troy has to stay behind from our family vacation to Mexico (boo-hiss) and had to supervise the insulation going in in advance of a big snowstorm that was predicted.

But, of course, there was no rest for the weary, and though Troy had already made the kind and stoic sacrifice of missing our family vacation and our brother's wedding, his sacrifice wasn't done. The insulation truck got stuck in the snow — twice! — meaning the insulators didn't just need to be supervised, but rescued, and their materials and tools ferried into our building site in our pickup truck. And then there were more snowstorms, and more stuck vehicles, and the whole endeavor was just a whole lot more frustrating and chaotic and exhausting that we could have ever imagined at the outset.

While the plan had been that insulation would be complete when the Boy Builder and I returned from Mexico and drywall would be well underway, the end result of all the early winter madness was that the insulation was only about 1/3 finished by the time we got back. Whew!

The insulation we chose for the interior cavities of our walls was a blown fiberglass product.
~ The first step of installation was stapling up netting to hold all the insulation in place
~ This happened while it was snowing and at the same time all the bags of insulation were being ferried at stocked in piles outside the house
~ The ordinary insulation truck that is used to blow the insulation couldn't get in on our road, so their portable (and not so efficient) insulation blower machine was brought in and used to blow the bales of fiberglass
~ A long vacuum hose like device snaked through the house and was used to fill the walls and ceiling with insulation
~ In the end all the wall cavities got filled with cotton-candy pink insulation

Once it was done the house felt so different. It was quiet and closed in feeling. Like a big step toward the finished spaces we've been imagining all along.

1 comment:

  1. Good explanation and photos. Thanks - Mom

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