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October 4, 2007
Vol. 2, Issue 10

By subscription only

Published the 1st Thursday of the month. To change your subscription, see link at end of email.

Hi , happy building!

Feature Tips:  

 

     - Interior Moisture Mitigation

 

 

Please add "TracysTips@BuildingTips.Net" to your whitelist or address book in your e-mail program, so that you have no trouble receiving future issues!

 


WEB Freebies

We've added three pictorial checklists: “Laundry Room Design,” “Kitchen Design,” and “Oops!”  These lists are chock-full of insightful information to help design function into your new home.  And you know what they say: “A picture is worth a thousand words!”  For more information, Click for FREEBIES !

Watch a Green Home in the Making!

Recently I worked with those designing the 2008 Vision Home to provide a functional analysis. This home, now under construction in the Orlando area, is a project of Green Builder Magazine and Westmont Homes. For detailed photos and additional information about this project and the suppliers who are working on it, see http://www.greenhomes.typepad.com.

Interior Moisture Mitigation
 

Steamy bathroom mirrors, damp walls, and fogged windows are more than annoying. They can indicate developing problems like mold and mildew, ruined insulation, and wood rot. As we build tighter houses, it is increasingly more important to choose exhaust fans powerful enough to address the humidity created in bath areas. To make certain you don't end up with cheap, noisy, ineffective fans, you need to be proactive in the specification of this product. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Sizing: Bath fans need to be sized properly. Code in your area may only require a fan powerful enough to produce an air volume of 50 CFM (cubic feet per minute), which is often not adequate to do the job. If your bathroom contains an operable window, you may not be required to have an exhaust fan at all, but unless you intend to open that window each time you shower, doing without a fan is not a reasonable option. And remember, if you have a separate commode room in the master bath, you need two fans, one above the commode and one to exhaust the portion of the room containing the shower. One fan manufacturer, Panasonic, offers a fan-sizing utility on their web site to help choose the right model for your bath. Go to www.panasonic.com/building
  • Run Time: Your bathroom exhaust fan should run long enough to sufficiently exhaust the moisture. Panasonic recommends that ventilation fans run for 30 minutes after a shower for best results. Panasonic's Whisperlite ventilation system, pictured above, provides the necessary CFM, combined with extreme quiet, which qualifies it as an Energy StarŪ product. To make it easier to run fans for the recommended amount of time, you might consider having your electrician connect them to a timer. Otherwise, some fans are so quiet that it's easy to forget to turn them off. For more information, visit www.Panasonic.com. (Photograph above courtesy of Panasonic.)
  • Installation: The fan must exhaust to the outdoors, not into the attic. The duct should terminate either at the roof or through an exterior wall. Hopefully, this is a code requirement in your area, but, nonetheless, confirm proper venting with your builder.

Broan-NuTone, LLC, has introduced a line of bath exhaust fans that automatically sense a rise in the air’s relative humidity and switch on to vent the moisture out of the room. In turn, these fans automatically shut off when the humidity drops below excessive levels. Visit www.Broan.com for more information.

 

Removing the steam generated when cooking is just as important as removing the steam generated from the shower. Next month, I’ll address features to consider when shopping for a kitchen exhaust hood.

 

Is there a subject you’d like me to cover?  Let me know by sending an email to tracy@tracystips.net.

All past issues of this ezine are in the Ezine Archives on our web site. Click here for Ezine Archives !

Copyright © 2007 Tracy DeCarlo - All Right Reserved


WANT A CHECK LIST OF HUNDREDS OF TIPS

AND IDEAS FOR DESIGNING A FUNCTIONAL HOME?

If you liked today’s tips you’ll love the book “Don’t Forget the Linen Closets!”  It’s packed with over 240 ideas and reminders to help you incorporate function, organization, and efficiency into your home without breaking the bank. 

To us, it [“Don’t Forget the Linen Closets”] is the most thorough guide to building a house, regardless of size, in the industry.  Most importantly, it is geared toward the folks who will actually live in the house.

By following your guidelines, we are confident that we will have a far more functional home than if we had been on our own. Also, we know that we and the builder have saved thousands of dollars by avoiding rework and non-functional design flaws. In fact we have dubbed the book, “The Home Buyers’ Essential Handbook for Design and Construction in Less Than 50 Pages.”

Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences in such a concise and useful way.

Bill and Yvonne Dunbar

Homeowners building a custom home

Orlando, FL – February 2006

If you’d like more personalized help, Tracy’s plan-review service will walk you through the process in detail.  In either case, planning the details in the beginning can save thousands in the end! To see more testimonials and/or to place your order, visit Detailed Solutions WEB site now.


WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR E-ZINE OR ON YOUR WEB SITE?

You can, as long as you include the following blurb in its entirety:

Tracy DeCarlo, author of “Don’t Forget the Linen Closets!” publishes the idea-packed, monthly e-zine “Tips for Designing a Functional Home.”  If you’re ready to learn how to incorporate organization, function, and efficiency into your new home or remodeling project without breaking the bank, get your FR*EE tips now at www.BuildingTips.net.



Tracy DeCarlo owner of Detailed Solutions, Inc., has more than twelve years' experience in the residential con­struction industry. As a Home Design Function Analyst, Tracy helps homeowners incorporate function, efficiency, and organization into new-home designs or remodeling projects. By working with homeowners to focus on their daily habits and preferences, Tracy helps create living spaces that support and complement their owners’ lifestyles. The time and money-saving ideas in her book are the direct result of her success in helping individual homeowners incorporate both function and organization into the design of their new homes.

In 2003, Tracy and her husband moved into their new, 5000-square-foot, custom-built home. By applying many of the tips outlined in her book, their building project finished at less than 1 percent over budget and included only one change order!

Tracy also offers products to help organize the laundry room, including her exclusive laundry sorter.  After noticing that the laundry rooms in so many homes of all price ranges were small and non-functional, she designed a wall-hung laundry sorter that will sort four loads of laundry in just 24” of wall space.  Learn more now at Sort N Neat Product Page.



 I’d love to hear from you:

  • What topics would you most like to see covered in upcoming issues of “Tips for Designing a Functional Home”?

  • How has this e-zine helped you to improve your design or avoid change order charges?

  • Mail to:  Tracy's Tips E-Mail

 Tracy DeCarlo, Detailed Solutions, Inc.

P.O. Box 161644, Altamonte Springs, FL  32714, United States

Phone 407-814-2328, Tracy's Tips E-Mail

Copyright © 2007 Tracy DeCarlo. All rights reserved.

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