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How to heat your home: Modern warmth keeps homes cozy

Kim Fuller
Special to the Daily
Courtesy Double Diamond Property

If your bare feet are on a wood floor without slippers and your soles don’t get cold, you might be walking on water.

In-floor radiant heating is very common in modern mountain homes. The most popular right now is hydronic heat, which is a mixture of water and glycol that runs in tubes underneath the floors.

Arnie Surdyk, owner of Double Diamond Property and Construction Services, based in Breckenridge, said the best way to install the hydronic in-floor radiant heat is to use gypcrete — a concrete building material used as a floor underlayer to hold the tubes beneath the floor.



Radiant heat runs on warm water pumped from a boiler in the home and can be heated in a variety of ways. A gas boiler, for example, burns natural gas or propane to heat water, which is then delivered to the in-floor heating tubes. Hot water from the boiler can also be directed to a home’s hot water supply, to a snow melting system or to heat a pool or hot tub.

“Thermostatically controlled, electric in-floor radiant heat is about a third of the cost to install, and the utility bills in the test houses are looking very reasonable.”
Nancy Andersen
owner and manager of Cornerstone Creations

Homeowners or builders who are looking for a more environmentally sound option could use solar panels to heat the boiler.



“One method that is popular and that we are seeing more and more of is hydronic solar, where solar heats the system,” said Surdyk. “It basically backs up to your boiler, so you’re using energy from the sun to heat the home.”

Another earth-inspired option is geothermal heat. Surdyk said Double Diamond installed it in a large home about a year ago. It has an expensive up-front cost, but uses heat from the ground to heat the boiler. The method relies on a series of underground holes, dug like wells, to draw heat up from the ground and into a home’s in-floor radiant system.

ELECTRIC COMEBACK?

Surdyk said hydronic in-floor radiant heat is what Double Diamond uses in its projects, as he believes it’s the most efficient and practical option. He said electric in-floor radiant heat is not as efficient for building full homes. “Not many people use electric up here,” he said. “It is more practical for a remodel than a reconstruction.”

Nancy Andersen, owner and manager of Cornerstone Creations, based in Frisco, said although hydronic in-floor radiant heat has become the standard these days, it is pretty expensive to install. And as a remodeling contractor, she said her problem with it is once you have in-floor radiant heat, it’s really hard to move walls.

“Once you’re into those heat zones, you can puncture a line as you’re altering the zones from one location to another,” she explained.

Electric in-floor radiant heat, she said, has come a long way, though there is still a resistance to using it.

“There is still a fear factor with contractors because they are in their comfort zone and don’t like to get out of it,” she said.

“This thermostatically controlled, electric in-floor radiant heat is about a third of the cost to install, and the utility bills in the test houses are looking very reasonable,” she added. “I do think this product will make its mark, as soon as someone gives it a chance.”

Another alternative for heating the home, Andersen explained, is electric co-heating. This is a great option for older homes that already have electric baseboards and don’t necessarily need a $20,000 heat change.

“This method is mounted to the top of the wall, up by the ceiling,” she said. “The co-heaters themselves cost about the same as an electric baseboard heater, and run on about 50 percent of the electricity. Also, this is an easy install if you’re dealing with a home that has existing electric baseboards.”

FIREPLACES CAN WORK

AS PRIMARY HEAT SOURCE

And if you think fireplaces are cozy, Andersen said you can use them as your primary heat source. Fireplaces are also helpful in circulating heat through modern homes — which are built tightly — instead of having to add air movers and filtration systems to bring fresh air into a home.

“If you use fireplaces as your primary heat source, you might have to put in a few more of them throughout the house, but gosh, that’s a nice feature to have,” she said. “And each fireplace brings in fresh air from the outside, heats it up and pushes it into the room.”

Consider an extra-efficient fireplace, like one that Cornerstone Creations has available to install. It’s 93 percent energy efficient, and the 2 gallons of water that it creates as a fuel by-product are filtered and pumped up to the top of the fireplace, making it a built-in humidifier.

“That’s killing two birds with one stone,” Andersen said of using the efficient fireplace, “and being very useful of a by-product that would otherwise be down the drain and be more waste.”

When choosing a heating system to put in your home, she suggested you consider what the future of the home will be. Will you ever want to reconstruct or expand, for example?

“You might want to upsize or downsize within your home,” she said, “and your heating needs should be routed to accommodate those future plans.”


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