Best insulation for 1925 stucco balloon-frame Four Square
I’ve searched through the existing Q&A, but can’t find a clear answer for my specific situation, so apologies if this is a repeat of an existing question.
My wife and I just purchased an old 1925 balloon-frame stucco 4-square in central Virginia (Zone 4 I believe), and are in the beginning stages of gutting/renovating the entire place.
There is currently no insulation in the walls, and I am hoping to get your input as to what my best couple options are, considering the wall system construction. In looking through the existing Q&A, I’ve become quite confused as to the need for a vapor barrier in these kinds of situations. So I’m hoping to get a clear resolution on that here as well.
Based on the very few areas that are visible so far, from the outside-in the wall system consists of: Painted stucco (I think with a metal mesh backing) > what appears to be tar paper > wood plank sheathing > 3.5″open cavity > plaster and lath. I’ve attached a photo which shows the wall cavity interior, from the inside.
We’ve already started removing the plaster and lath to facilitate insulation/electrical/plumbing upgrades. I didn’t want to deal with trying to retrofit this with the plaster/lath in place.
I like the idea of rockwool batts for fire resistance and sound deadening, but I think the irregular stud spacing would make installation a pain. And blown-in rockwool apparently is very hard to find? My mother has blown-in cellulose in her house (built circa 2000) and loves it. It also seems to be recommended quite often here.
所以,长话短说,你insulation recommendation in this instance?
Thanks very much,
-Travis
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I can't get an orientation on that picture. Is that a rim joist ? Are we looking down? Is that a fragment of tar paper? A metal heat vent? Is that building balloon framed?
At any rate the view we have looks like new to me in terms of no rotting or mold. I think you will get great advice here . Listen carefully to the building science guys as buildings like that can be one hundred years old and you can screw them up as you are rightly concerned about. I suspect they will recommend no or a smart vapor barrier. Depending on your budget rock wool or fiberglass insulation. Air tight drywall although that might not work well if there is a vapor barrier.
Your approach might change if you find rot or mold in the walls cavities. Just trying to get this discussion started.
I would make sure that you have two layers of felt under the stucco. If this is the case, it is safe to insulate the wall with your choice of fluffy insulation. As extra insurance, it won't hurt to staple up some house wrap into the cavities. This doesn't apply in your case, but some good info here for insulating old houses:
//m.etiketa4.com/article/insulating-walls-in-an-old-house-with-no-sheathing
With a balloon frame house more than 50% of your heat loss is from air leaks. The important part is to air seal. This mean sealing up the stud and floor bays. Unless dense packed, insulation won't help on this front. You need to cut pieces of wood or rigid foam to fit in there and seal them in place with canned foam.
Sometimes interior partition walls go right up into the attic without any top plates which is essentially a giant hole to the outdoors.
Thanks for the replies so far. Just some additional clarification: The photo is taken looking in to the old kitchen wall along the side of what used to be the exhaust vent for the microwave. So that's the metal exhaust ductwork that's visible in the photo. I haven't started pulling down the plaster/lath yet, so this was the best photo I could get of the wall cavity. I'll be better able to view the back side of the exterior once we start pulling down plaster/lath this week.
I'm fairly certain it's balloon-frame, but I'll get some more photos this week and let y'all see for yourselves.
Akos, what are the odds that they used 2 layers of felt ~100 years ago? What if I only have one layer?
Thanks again!
-Travis
Travis,
With an insulated wall you MUST manage bulk water intrusion. If there is not a proper WRB, than you need to follow the advice in the earlier link.
There is good chance that the existing wall doesn't have the proper WRB details, this is just the price and charm of owning a century home.
One item you must pay very careful attention to is flashing around all your windows and doors. These uninsulated balloon frame walls tolerate a lot of leaks without issues, but if you insulate without dealing with the water leaks you'll end up with a moldy mess.
So it's taken me a little longer than I intended to provide an update, but I finally got around to taking some more photos yesterday now that we've got pretty much the whole house gutted.
General update:
-While the house IS balloon framed, there is wood blocking installed in all the stud bays between the floors. So there probably wasn't as much air movement in the exterior wall cavities as there is in the typical balloon-framed walls that are open from the basement to the roof. I've included a photo of the blocking.
-The vast majority of the exterior walls are in what looks to me to be amazingly good shape considering the age. As you'll see in the photos, there is some evidence of minor moisture wicking at the nails used to fasten the tar paper and stucco mesh to the sheathing. I'm not really concerned about this (should I be?).
-There is also some evidence of leakage around windows (which I was expecting), but we're replacing all the windows, and will address these areas at that time. This is the ONLY place I've found even the slightest evidence of mold/wood rot.
intru——似乎也有一些水分sion around the chimney (photo with brick in it), and at the exterior wall on either side of the front porch (this appears to have been resolved, as stucco patching is visible on the exterior in these areas and they didn't seem to be wet yesterday after 2 days of rain).
I found a couple areas where I could poke at the tar paper barrier from the inside, and there seems to be a little bit of space between it and the stucco mesh, so maybe a small air gap there but I have no idea how consistent it is throughout the exterior.
So, all of that being said, with the combination of the stucco and tar paper providing a WRB, and the general good condition of the exterior walls, and if I address all of the issues around the windows, what does the GBA community recommend in the way of insulation systems?
I'm leaning towards dense-pack cellulose in the existing cavity, possibly with a 1/2" layer of foam board underneath the drywall to help (a little) with thermal bridging. Am I likely to have problems with this setup? Anything else I need to do as a precautionary measure?
Thanks again,
-Travis
Anybody?