|
Home Comfort
We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - With a home energy audit, you can find out where your home is losing energy and find out what you can change to lower your energy bills.
- Home Energy Pros is an open social network for home performance and weatherization professionals.
- How to make homes tight and ventilate right.
- An examination of 13 common myths reveals that they should be treated with some healthy skepticism.
- The homeowner gains a finished, insulated
basement, a healthy house, and an estimated
energy savings of a whopping 81%.
- Insulation is needed in warm climates to keep the heat outside and in cold climates to keep the heat inside.
- An insulation\'s resistance to heat flow is measured or rated in terms of its thermal resistance or R-value.
- These are improvements you can make right now. Some may add years of usability and safety to your home.
- Universal design strives to be a broad-spectrum solution that helps everyone, not just people with disabilities.
- How does radiant heat, as opposed to air temperature, contribute to a proper
home comfort system?
- Viewing the whole house as an integrated system helps.
- With the ill effects of poor indoor air quality often in the news these days, it pays to
design and build a house that’s healthy from the start.
- What is known about tight construction, why it is a good idea, and how it is integral to systematic house design and construction.
- Study finds healthy, efficient homes increasingly accessible to all.
- EPA encourages Americans to save on summer cooling costs through proper use of programmable thermostats.
- Energy-efficient glass with a low-E coating is one of several types of insulated glass.
- A preventive, systematic approach to health, safety and comfort is a homeowner’s best defense against poor air quality, unexpected breakdowns and expensive repairs.
- Rather than leaving ventilation to chance, these systems exchange stale air for fresh air in your home, while helping to maintain indoor climate control.
- LEED homes offer many benefits to home owners, including lower energy and water bills; reduced greenhouse gas emissions; increased comfort, less exposure to indoor pollutants such as mold, mildew and other indoor toxins, and lower maintenance costs.
- A healthy house needs balanced airflow.
We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.

Information provided by The Healthy House Institute is designed to support,
not to replace the relationship between patient/physician or other qualified
healthcare provider.
Education Partners
Ads, ad links, products and content on this page are not necessarily endorsed by these organizations.
|

We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
|