Alaska4Ever
Member
Hello all.. I am new.. From Alaska and trying to get my new shop up and running so i have a work place in the long winters. Sorry for the long post but wanted to give some background to try to answer as many questions as possible. I will post some pics as soon as i learn how
Here it goes:
Background:
I live in very small town in remote Interior Alaska where the nearest town to get supplies is Fairbanks 1.5 hours away so obtaining help and rental equipment is either expensive, impossible or both. Winter here begins mid October and last usually late April where temperatures regularly are in the negatives and the dead of winter can be lows of -40 and highs -20 or so.
The barn that is need of insulation is 50 x 80 with 14 foot ceilings and 8/12 roof. The back 1000 square feet is a shed style roof. (50x20)
When i bought it the barn was framed out inside with 2x4x14 walls and the ceiling is ready for ceiling (1x6) on16 inch centers.
Mission: Insulate and finish out the inside. I am looking to keep the temp at least above freezing during the winter so i can store paint and such and hopefully heat it up so i can work out in the long winters. I know it is cold but coming out from negatives even to a 32-40 degree barn is noticeable. Heat will come from coal boiler with additional coal or wood stove.
Money is obviously not unlimited and on a barn this size small increases add up. I would love spray foam but it is not possible or an option. I would also like to be able to accomplish by myself or with my 100 pound wife as a helper due to location. I am also not held to codes but want to not make it dangerous either.
Ceiling… i would like to stay away from sheetrock.. weight and ability to hang without a jack is almost impossible. Will be lots of room above the insulation with such a steep roof pitch.
I was thinking 1 inch foam for the ceiling due to ease of hanging, insulation factor. I plan on blowing fiberglass to insulation no matter what just need a ceiling. Liner panels are an option but at 1.20 sq/ft gets expensive
Walls… could be sheetrock, OSB or liner panels. the main issue with the walls is from the back of the 2x4s to the metal is about 15 inches. I was thinking R 13 in the studs with 1 inch foam on the girts to keep condensation on the metal a bay. Also if this is not enough I can then blow loose insulation in the void if needed. The foam board was planned in the event i do this to keep the cellulose from resting against the metal. I plan on ensuring the vapor barrier is well sealed to assist with sealing the building air envelope.
One Question is do you think the foam is necessary in the walls if I do decide to blow in insulation.
Second question… is foam needed in between the rafters on the shed roof in the back. Thinking that i do this put a ceiling below and blow insulation between. Again the thought is to keep condensation off the roof.
Sorry for the long post but wanted to paint a good picture so people can weigh in on ideas.
thanks
Here it goes:
Background:
I live in very small town in remote Interior Alaska where the nearest town to get supplies is Fairbanks 1.5 hours away so obtaining help and rental equipment is either expensive, impossible or both. Winter here begins mid October and last usually late April where temperatures regularly are in the negatives and the dead of winter can be lows of -40 and highs -20 or so.
The barn that is need of insulation is 50 x 80 with 14 foot ceilings and 8/12 roof. The back 1000 square feet is a shed style roof. (50x20)
When i bought it the barn was framed out inside with 2x4x14 walls and the ceiling is ready for ceiling (1x6) on16 inch centers.
Mission: Insulate and finish out the inside. I am looking to keep the temp at least above freezing during the winter so i can store paint and such and hopefully heat it up so i can work out in the long winters. I know it is cold but coming out from negatives even to a 32-40 degree barn is noticeable. Heat will come from coal boiler with additional coal or wood stove.
Money is obviously not unlimited and on a barn this size small increases add up. I would love spray foam but it is not possible or an option. I would also like to be able to accomplish by myself or with my 100 pound wife as a helper due to location. I am also not held to codes but want to not make it dangerous either.
Ceiling… i would like to stay away from sheetrock.. weight and ability to hang without a jack is almost impossible. Will be lots of room above the insulation with such a steep roof pitch.
I was thinking 1 inch foam for the ceiling due to ease of hanging, insulation factor. I plan on blowing fiberglass to insulation no matter what just need a ceiling. Liner panels are an option but at 1.20 sq/ft gets expensive
Walls… could be sheetrock, OSB or liner panels. the main issue with the walls is from the back of the 2x4s to the metal is about 15 inches. I was thinking R 13 in the studs with 1 inch foam on the girts to keep condensation on the metal a bay. Also if this is not enough I can then blow loose insulation in the void if needed. The foam board was planned in the event i do this to keep the cellulose from resting against the metal. I plan on ensuring the vapor barrier is well sealed to assist with sealing the building air envelope.
One Question is do you think the foam is necessary in the walls if I do decide to blow in insulation.
Second question… is foam needed in between the rafters on the shed roof in the back. Thinking that i do this put a ceiling below and blow insulation between. Again the thought is to keep condensation off the roof.
Sorry for the long post but wanted to paint a good picture so people can weigh in on ideas.
thanks
