|
|
|
Drainage plane Documents
Up one level
-
BSD-013: Rain Control in Buildings
by
John Straube
—
last modified
2008/09/09
-
Moisture is one of the most important agents leading to building enclosure deterioration. Understanding and predicting moisture movement within and through the enclosure is therefore of fundamental importance to predicting and improving building enclosure performance, particularly durability. Since driving rain deposition on walls and roofs is quantitatively the largest single source of moisture for most walls and roofs, it is no surprise that controlling rain penetration is one of the most important parts of a successful moisture control strategy. In fact, failure to control rain is likely the oldest and most common serious building enclosure performance problem. Commentators as long as Vitruvius (70 BC) bemoaned the challenges of controlling rain penetration.
This document will consider rain control from a general to a specific level. The following sections will cover: basic moisture control principles that should be employed in the design of above-grade building enclosures; driving rain as a moisture load on walls; a classification system of the various rain control strategies available for walls; and finally, good design practises for walls. The rain control of roofs will be covered in more detail in another BSD.
-
BSD-105: Understanding Drainage Planes
by
Joseph Lstiburek
—
last modified
2008/10/14
-
Controlling rain is the single most important factor in the design and construction of durable buildings and in the control of mold.
Drainage planes are used in the design and construction of building enclosures to control rain.
All exterior claddings pass some rainwater. Siding leaks, brick leaks, stucco leaks, stone leaks, etc. As such, some control of this penetrating rainwater is required. In most walls, this penetrating rainwater is controlled by the drainage plane that directs the penetrating water downwards and outwards.
-
BSD-135: Ice Dams
by
John Straube
—
last modified
2008/08/20
-
Ice dams are a common roof performance problem in buildings that experience snowfall and at least a month of below freezing temperatures. The combination of sufficient roof pitch, adequate insulation just above the exterior wall, and air sealing at the wall-roof assemblies transition are all essential to prevent ice dams. But ice dams can occur even in properly detailed roof assemblies from differential solar snow melt. This digest outlines both the causes and solutions to ice dam problems.
-
BSD-146: EIFS - Problems and Solutions
by
Joseph Lstiburek
—
last modified
2008/10/02
-
Stucco and EIFS are common cladding systems that appear similar from the exterior. These systems have very different attributes however. This Digest explains the reasoons why face-sealed EIFS are fundamentally flawed as cladding systems for most applications, and describes how drained EIFS can be used successfully in almost all climate zones and exosures. Cracks, lamina deterioration, and movement joints are also discussed.
-
BSI-004: Drainage, Holes and Moderation
by
Joseph Lstiburek
—
last modified
2008/09/09
-
An edited version of this Insight first appeared in the ASHRAE Journal. Ever wonder how we can build a 50 story glass tower that doesn’t leak, but we can’t seem to build a two-story house that doesn’t leak? The answer is a little bit of counter intuitive thinking.
|
| Sign Up For Our E-newsletter! |
|
|
|