Abstract

Wooden floors were traditionally used in brick apartment houses built at the turn of 20th century in many European cities. Thermal renovation of such houses often involves thermal insulation at interior side of external walls. Internal insulation makes microclimate in the vicinity of wooden beam ends colder and more humid. The real-scale experiment involving a part of wooden floor connected to a 30 cm thick masonry wall was monitored for two consecutive years. Measured data were used to compare microclimate in sealed and open joist pockets. Joist pockets were either placed in the masonry wall with plaster on both sides or placed in the same masonry wall insulated on the interior side (vapour open thermal insulation system). The measured results indicate that the sealing tape alone is not sufficient to keep the relative humidity in joist pockets below 85 % in cold climate and under high internal moisture load. The paper concludes that reasonable trade-off between thermal efficiency, thermal comfort and moisture safety is difficult to reach for masonry with internal insulation and wooden floors. Sealing provisions complemented by tempering of joist pockets are considered as two key technical measures for reliable hygro-thermal performance of wooden beam ends in full-brick masonry with interior thermal insulation in cold temperate climate.

Highlights

  • 36 % of the Czech population live in buildings built before 1945 [1]

  • Calculated daily mean values of temperature and relative humidity are depicted in Figure 4 – Figure 10

  • Mean values of temperature and relative humidity in joist pockets together with boundary conditions are depicted in Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7 and Figure 8

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Summary

Introduction

36 % of the Czech population live in buildings built before 1945 [1]. These buildings are typically 4 to 5 floors high with cold attic under pitched roof. The thickness of the masonry usually ranges from 75 to 45 cm, with half-brick decrement per one floor. Masonry with thickness of 30 cm could be found, e.g. in gables. Masonry is built from full red bricks and is usually plastered on both sides. Thermal transmittance of the wall is much higher than the current technical standards require. The thermal insulation placed on the external side of the wall is not permitted or technically feasible and majority of such existing buildings is still in its original condition

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