Building with Glass – Conservatories and Glazed Extensions
It seems that almost everybody wants a home with plenty of daylight now and with improvements in the thermal insulation of glass and roof light styles it is achievable.
Brightly lit conservatories, orangeries, sun rooms and garden rooms can suit our temperate climate well and bring us as near to the garden as we can be when the weather stops us from actually being in it.
Apart from creating a Segue between the outdoors and in, letting in daylight makes environmental sense as well as improving our well-being, but to get more light through into our homes it is better to have windows that face the rays square on and pitched roof windows or lantern lights are best. If the light ways are reaching the glass at an acute angle, a fair proportion of them will simply bounce off as reflection and so rooms with just pitched roof lights are often brighter than those with just windows. The distance to which light will reach inside is limited with the height of windows, but rooflights allow you to extend out further without depriving the existing home of light. If you yearn more for the view or a connection to the garden, glazed folding or sliding doors and storey-height windows that reach from floor to ceiling are the answer.
Heat Loss from the Glazed Extension
For those wanting to extend living space with brightly day lit rooms, building an extension with plenty of glass in both the roof and walls seems the solution. But there is a problem with reaping natural light. Double glazing has improved on what it used to be thirty years ago and yes it may be great for letting the light through but it also great at letting heat escape out through. For every square metre of window the rate at which heat passes out through it, is typically two or three times that of the wall itself and for a roof window it is more likely to be eight times that of the insulated roof. Even so, the insulation values have greatly improved and with gas filled cavities and heat (low-e) reflective coatings, we now have windows that have the same insulation value as a nine inch solid brick wall. It will not be long before they compare to the cavity walls of the 1970’s.
As a consequence, the use of glass in extensions is limited to meet the energy efficiency standards of the Building Regulations. Even so, it is possible to extend with a permanently habitable space that fills the home with both light and warmth. It just requires some careful design.
Home Extensions are checked for compliance with requirement L1B (energy efficiency) on an elemental basis by applying maximum u-values to each element of external construction. Floors, walls, roofs, but also windows and doors and one additional control to limit the amount of glazing as a percentage of the new floor area to 25%. One quarter of the extension floor area can be used for the total area of windows, rooflights and glazed doors. Bear in mind that you can deduct any existing glazed areas that you will be removing by extending over them.
Even so, given the contemporary desire for more daylight in our homes, with glazed roof lanterns and walls of bi-folding storey-height glass doors, many extensions exceed the 25%. All is not lost, but some extra design work is needed to justify the extra glazing and show how it will be compensated for with improved insulation elsewhere. If you find yourself over the 25% limit, Average U-value calculations are the place to start
Average U-value calculations
In the example shown, a flat roofed extension of 20 sq. m area has a 10 sq.m roof light so 50% of the extension floor area is covered by the roof light. Twice the allowed area. By improving on the allowable u-values, the actual area weighted U-value is still less the permitted area weighted U-value and hence the extension still complies with the energy requirements.
Proposed Extension with permitted max. U-values and areas
New External wall ……………………………………….. area 40 sq.m x 0.28 = 11.20
Windows (minus removed existing window area) 25% of floor area 5 sq.m x 1.6 = 8.00
New Floor area ……………………………. area 20 sq.m x. 0.22 = 4.40
New flat roof area…………………………………………… area 15 sq.m x 0.18 = 2.70
Total area = 80 sq.m Total heat loss = 26.3
Permitted Area-weighted u- value = total heat loss/total area = 26.3/80 = 0.32875 U-value
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Proposed Extension with actual U-values and areas
New External wall …………… ……………………………… area 40 sq.m x 0.22 = 8.8
Windows (minus removed existing window area)… area 10 sq.m x 1.2 = 12.1
New Floor area …………………………………………………… area 20 sq.m x 0.18 = 3.6
New Flat Roof area … …………………………………..........area 10 sq.m x 0.13 = 1.3
Total area = 80 sq.m Total heat loss = 25.8
Actual Area-weighted u- value total heat loss/total area = 25.8/80 = 0.32250 U-value
As the actual area-weighted u-value is no worse than the permitted it complies.
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Of course you need to have calculated the actual u-values from your design but insulation manufacturers will help you with these. Some provide design calculators on their websites.
If that doesn’t work you can still adopt a wider flexible approach that considers the whole house instead of just the extension by itself.
SAP Calculations
Undertaken for new dwellings as a matter of course the glazed elements, are all designed in. This is why you can self-build a new home with a glass roofed kitchen for example, whilst the home extender may struggle to justify a glass-roofed kitchen extension of an existing home.
SAP calculations can still be used with extensions to illustrate that the total carbon emissions from the extended home are no worse than they would have been if the same extension had been built to just the elemental maximum u-value and area limits. The benefits of SAP calculations over the average U-value method is that they consider the whole dwelling instead of just the extension, and hence they widen the scope for compensating for the extra glass by taking into account energy efficient light fittings and new boilers, as well as heat gains from south-facing windows for example. The downside is that you can’t do them yourself. They have to be carried out by a qualified consultant SAP assessor, but if you are planning to upgrade the existing home as well as extend, they are the best option for you.