palsor1
Well-known member
Hey guys,
I live in Austin, TX where it routinely gets over 100 degrees in the summer and my attached garage gets HOT. This isn’t helped by my house facing west so the afternoon sun beats down on the garage doors and heats everything up. You can see a picture of my garage below. The two bays to the right are below living space, and the by to the left is below attic space. There are no windows or other ventilation and insulation is limited to the walls shared with living space. I’m looking for advice on what would actually help.
Here are some ideas I have considered:
Obviously cost is somewhat of a concern, but I’d really like to understand what everyone thinks would be effective first. If you guys have any thoughts, please let me know.
- Andy
I live in Austin, TX where it routinely gets over 100 degrees in the summer and my attached garage gets HOT. This isn’t helped by my house facing west so the afternoon sun beats down on the garage doors and heats everything up. You can see a picture of my garage below. The two bays to the right are below living space, and the by to the left is below attic space. There are no windows or other ventilation and insulation is limited to the walls shared with living space. I’m looking for advice on what would actually help.
Here are some ideas I have considered:
- Insulate garage doors - Ideally insulating the garage doors would keep the heat from the afternoon sun out. Of course, this would keep the heat from the cars in, so ultimately I’m not very clear whether this would be a benefit or not.
- Add a window - I could have a contractor put a window in the side of the garage. The hope is that I could open it on hot days and get some cooler air moving though. This would also help let in some light while the garage doors are closed. The down side to this is that the left side of the house is brick and is where all of the electrical and AC lines run into the house so we’d have to cut through the brick, put a window in, and rebrick all while avoiding existing stuff in the walls.
- Build a vent into the attic - The attic already has vents in the soffits and hawk vents in the roof to let air move through there. My theory here is that I could vent up into the attic space and the hot air from the garage would make its way up there and out the hawk vents in the roof. I have no idea how big of a vent I would need to make this useful.
- Build a vent up to the roof - In the previous bullet I was suggesting venting into the attic. Here I’m suggesting venting all the way up to the roof. I don’t know enough about air flow to know whether this would be better or not.
- Put a fan in the ceiling to vent to attic/roof - A variation on the previous two option. Instead of just putting a passive vent in, I could put in a fan to actively pull air from the garage and push it into the attic or out of a roof vent.
- Insulate the attic and left wall - similar to insulating the garage doors, the hope is that this would keep some heat out, but this would also keep heat from cars in, and I don’t think has as much obvious benefit because the attic and left side of the garage are pretty well shaded on the outside so i don’t think the sun hits them as hard.
- Add a mini-split AC - This would be ideal, but for some reason this doesn’t seem efficient to me yet. I think I need to find more passive ways to get temperature under control first.
Obviously cost is somewhat of a concern, but I’d really like to understand what everyone thinks would be effective first. If you guys have any thoughts, please let me know.
- Andy
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