Ok so here's the deal. I'm getting my ducks in a row to start construction on a new shop (sharing the current shop with family *****!)
So this building will be 12" block walls. With 13-16' ceilings. Peope ask me why 12" block and I have 2 answers for them
1. Better insulation both in air space and/or in available room for spray foam or poured type.
2. I bought 3300 block for pennies on the dollar when a commercial building was planned but never happened. (I ended up rewith 3300 custom color block, 9000 brick, bundles of durawall ladder wire, a cube of 2" pink foam as well as mortar tubs, water barrels, and other stuff from this building that never was
SO that's out of the way
I live in NW Indiana (think Chicago weather) temps in the winter ranges from 50° for mild winters (like last year) to -20 in cold years. So I need something that can handle - temps. Sometimes for a month or more at a time. Couple winters back we were below 0 for like 15 days straight. My initial plan was radiant. But I'm open to anything really. As far as fuel type. I have natural gas service to the house already. So that's an option. With the high ceilings my thinking was radiant floor and ceiling fans. Obviously I'm interested in cost efficiency like everyone else in the world is. I like the idea of mini splits being that I could heat and cool however with the filtration issues with mini splits I don't know if that would be a good option for me as this building is going to be used mainly for metal work, auto work/restoration/fabrication etc. So grinder dust and plasma dust probably aren't to friendly to a mini split filter. I've tossed around the idea of forced air heat either ducted or a hanging furnace. The current shop has 2 hanging units but I'm not really all that impressed with them. Any ideas? Suggestions? If I do radiant it would most likely be a natural gas fired boiler or a natural gas water heater (I'd prefer tankless), for forced air heat i'm thinking ducted along the ceiling (up draft furnace) and out the furnace in the compressor room so it doesn't pull much vapor from the shop space and again ceiling fans to get that heat back down from the high ceilings.
So this building will be 12" block walls. With 13-16' ceilings. Peope ask me why 12" block and I have 2 answers for them
1. Better insulation both in air space and/or in available room for spray foam or poured type.
2. I bought 3300 block for pennies on the dollar when a commercial building was planned but never happened. (I ended up rewith 3300 custom color block, 9000 brick, bundles of durawall ladder wire, a cube of 2" pink foam as well as mortar tubs, water barrels, and other stuff from this building that never was
SO that's out of the way
I live in NW Indiana (think Chicago weather) temps in the winter ranges from 50° for mild winters (like last year) to -20 in cold years. So I need something that can handle - temps. Sometimes for a month or more at a time. Couple winters back we were below 0 for like 15 days straight. My initial plan was radiant. But I'm open to anything really. As far as fuel type. I have natural gas service to the house already. So that's an option. With the high ceilings my thinking was radiant floor and ceiling fans. Obviously I'm interested in cost efficiency like everyone else in the world is. I like the idea of mini splits being that I could heat and cool however with the filtration issues with mini splits I don't know if that would be a good option for me as this building is going to be used mainly for metal work, auto work/restoration/fabrication etc. So grinder dust and plasma dust probably aren't to friendly to a mini split filter. I've tossed around the idea of forced air heat either ducted or a hanging furnace. The current shop has 2 hanging units but I'm not really all that impressed with them. Any ideas? Suggestions? If I do radiant it would most likely be a natural gas fired boiler or a natural gas water heater (I'd prefer tankless), for forced air heat i'm thinking ducted along the ceiling (up draft furnace) and out the furnace in the compressor room so it doesn't pull much vapor from the shop space and again ceiling fans to get that heat back down from the high ceilings.
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