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A homeowner in Asbury Park, NJ was dealing with cold drafts in the winter, high energy bills, and limited attic storage. After inspecting the attic, we found it wasn’t properly air sealed, allowing heat to escape into the attic and making it difficult to maintain consistent indoor temperatures. We sealed all cracks, gaps, and penetrations to stop the air leaks, then installed 4-inch rigid foam boards over the floor joists for a storage platform, sealing all seams and adding plywood decking on top. Retaining dams were installed around the storage area, and the remaining attic was insulated with blown-in TruSoft cellulose insulation to an optimal R-60 level. The result is a properly sealed and insulated attic, improved comfort, lower energy bills, and a clean, functional storage space.
This customer in Neptune NJ, had signifcant comfort, energy and indoor air quality concerns. The duct system in crawl space was a major contributing factor. Before ducts leaked heated and cooled air into crawl, as well as allowed a direct air path from the crawl space into the living space above. The crawl space was wet, loaded with insects, rodents, droppings, wet moldy insulation just to name a few. We repaired and sealed the duct system, removed contaminated materials and installed a Clean space crawl encapsulation system. Now the crawl is dry, warm and clean. The ductwork is now inside a insulated crawl VS. outside the building shell.
Wet nasty crawl space with wet dirt floor, fiberglass insulation installed upside down, mold developing in crawl due to high moisture. Dr. Energy Saver division of Home Comfort & Energy Experts removed insulation and installed dimpled drainage matting, to allow water movement and provide a thermal break, installed clean space liner on floors, piers, and 1' up the walls, 2" Silver glo insulation on walls and finishing up by insulating and sealing the rim joist. (where the wooden structure sits on the block foudation) with 2" of closed cell spray foam. Great looking crawl.
Actual vented crawl space with fiberglass insulation and poor ductwork. This customer had cold floors and damp smells in the home. The completed crawl is dry and warm.
This is a common site in attics. Fiberglass insulation in direct contact with a metal chimney. This is not in conformance with building codes and is a fire hazard. Dr. Energy Saver division of Home Comfort & Energy Experts corrected by installing insulation retaining dam with proper clearances.