Dick in Wisconsin
Well-known member
I own the 2,200sf house my parents built in 1955 and that I was raised in. Time for retirement to it. House was a very high quality build for 1955 ... but its 2021 now. Real plaster interior walls, complicated floor plan to maximize views on a river, lots of exterior walls and windows. I presume 2x4's with some kind of sheathing then early to mid 60's aluminum siding. House still has 90% of the original 1955 wood Curtis windoes. There might be a couple of modest additions as part of this project.
The aluminum siding is coming off and the Curtis wood casement windows are being replaced too. I'm thinking of:
1. pulling the 1955 sheathing off,
2. pulling the fiberglass batt (I think) insulation out,
3. doing any outside wall wiring I need to (all wiring is BX cable with two prong outlets),
4. then adding a 2x2 to each stud to get a 6" wall,
5. then spray foam insulation since I can't vapor barrier from the inside (the fiberglass might have kraft paper backing, not sure yet),
6. then OSB sheathing,
7. 1" styrofoam insulation,
8. Tyvek, and
9. Hardi-board horizontal siding.
Windows will be Andersen, Marvin, or Pella better to best grade picture and casement all installed probably.
The house is located NW of Green Bay, Wisconsin and faces west with the river to the west. The winter winds are brutal across the frozen river. I have tenants in the house now, they don't seem to complain too much about the heating bills in the winter (geo-thermal ground water heat pump).
I want to end up with a tight, well insulated house ... but I don't want to go too far beyond the point of diminishing returns.
What are the thoughts on what I've proposed? Does it make sense? Or am I going over board and beyond what makes economic sense?
The aluminum siding is coming off and the Curtis wood casement windows are being replaced too. I'm thinking of:
1. pulling the 1955 sheathing off,
2. pulling the fiberglass batt (I think) insulation out,
3. doing any outside wall wiring I need to (all wiring is BX cable with two prong outlets),
4. then adding a 2x2 to each stud to get a 6" wall,
5. then spray foam insulation since I can't vapor barrier from the inside (the fiberglass might have kraft paper backing, not sure yet),
6. then OSB sheathing,
7. 1" styrofoam insulation,
8. Tyvek, and
9. Hardi-board horizontal siding.
Windows will be Andersen, Marvin, or Pella better to best grade picture and casement all installed probably.
The house is located NW of Green Bay, Wisconsin and faces west with the river to the west. The winter winds are brutal across the frozen river. I have tenants in the house now, they don't seem to complain too much about the heating bills in the winter (geo-thermal ground water heat pump).
I want to end up with a tight, well insulated house ... but I don't want to go too far beyond the point of diminishing returns.
What are the thoughts on what I've proposed? Does it make sense? Or am I going over board and beyond what makes economic sense?
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