Good day, everyone!
This is my first post, so my apologies in advance for any faux pas that I commit.
We have a huge problem with a very cold floor that is above an unheated garage. The details are as follows...
We live in a condo building in the Northeast (Boston). Our unit is on the first living level, directly above a 40-car, grade level unheated parking garage. We happen to have the misfortune of being directly above the garage door, which not surprisingly gets opened and closed a lot. In the winter, it's not unusual to see floor temperatures in the low 50's in our living room (which has hardwood floors) - this past winter was especially harsh, and I often measured floor temps in the high 40's - brrrrr! We've resigned ourselves to insulating the garage ceiling, even at our own expense if necessary.
The building was constructed in 1989. Lots of corners were cut (don't ask), which includes shoddy insulation of the garage ceiling. The building is a commercial-style structure - i.e., lots of concrete and steel. Sub-floors are 4"-thick concrete slabs that sit in a corrugated steel pan. The pan is supported by thick concrete posts and steel I-beams, spaced approximately every 20 feet. Between and perpendicular to the I-beams are 12"-tall steel lattice joists, spaced every 24 inches. The garage ceiling is finished with a suspended sheetrock surface. The cavity between the sheetrock and the corrugated steel pan is about 18" tall. The cavity was filled haphazardly with fiberglass insulation rolls, maximum thickness of around 4" and lots of gaps. Needless to say, our winters have not been warm and cozy, and our heating bills have been inordinately high, not to mention wasteful and environmentally-unfriendly.
So, I'm looking at having closed-cell foam applied to the corrugated steel pan holding the concrete sub-floor. The area to be covered is about 800 square feet. I'm told that the R-value of CC-foam is about R6-R7 per inch of thickness. I'm also told that one "set" of CC-foam yields about 4000 square feet of coverage at 1" thickness. Doing the math, our 800 square foot area yields about 5" thickness, which provides an R-factor of R30-R35. Of course, the sheetrock ceiling will have to be torn out to apply the foam properly and then will have to be replaced.
So, the $64000 question is: will that much coverage provide adequate insulation to mitigate the severity of the coldness that we experience on our floors? Even better: can we hope to experience *any* relief at all at that thickness using CC-foam? How much R-factor is "enough" - would R-70 be overkill/not worthwhile? Is there another/better insulation option? Also, the ceiling cavity contains some plumbing pipes and electrical wiring - is there any reason for concern about covering those things with the foam.
Questions, questions, questions. Your insights and recommendations will be enormously appreciated...
Regards,
-Bob-
This is my first post, so my apologies in advance for any faux pas that I commit.
We have a huge problem with a very cold floor that is above an unheated garage. The details are as follows...
We live in a condo building in the Northeast (Boston). Our unit is on the first living level, directly above a 40-car, grade level unheated parking garage. We happen to have the misfortune of being directly above the garage door, which not surprisingly gets opened and closed a lot. In the winter, it's not unusual to see floor temperatures in the low 50's in our living room (which has hardwood floors) - this past winter was especially harsh, and I often measured floor temps in the high 40's - brrrrr! We've resigned ourselves to insulating the garage ceiling, even at our own expense if necessary.
The building was constructed in 1989. Lots of corners were cut (don't ask), which includes shoddy insulation of the garage ceiling. The building is a commercial-style structure - i.e., lots of concrete and steel. Sub-floors are 4"-thick concrete slabs that sit in a corrugated steel pan. The pan is supported by thick concrete posts and steel I-beams, spaced approximately every 20 feet. Between and perpendicular to the I-beams are 12"-tall steel lattice joists, spaced every 24 inches. The garage ceiling is finished with a suspended sheetrock surface. The cavity between the sheetrock and the corrugated steel pan is about 18" tall. The cavity was filled haphazardly with fiberglass insulation rolls, maximum thickness of around 4" and lots of gaps. Needless to say, our winters have not been warm and cozy, and our heating bills have been inordinately high, not to mention wasteful and environmentally-unfriendly.
So, I'm looking at having closed-cell foam applied to the corrugated steel pan holding the concrete sub-floor. The area to be covered is about 800 square feet. I'm told that the R-value of CC-foam is about R6-R7 per inch of thickness. I'm also told that one "set" of CC-foam yields about 4000 square feet of coverage at 1" thickness. Doing the math, our 800 square foot area yields about 5" thickness, which provides an R-factor of R30-R35. Of course, the sheetrock ceiling will have to be torn out to apply the foam properly and then will have to be replaced.
So, the $64000 question is: will that much coverage provide adequate insulation to mitigate the severity of the coldness that we experience on our floors? Even better: can we hope to experience *any* relief at all at that thickness using CC-foam? How much R-factor is "enough" - would R-70 be overkill/not worthwhile? Is there another/better insulation option? Also, the ceiling cavity contains some plumbing pipes and electrical wiring - is there any reason for concern about covering those things with the foam.
Questions, questions, questions. Your insights and recommendations will be enormously appreciated...
Regards,
-Bob-
