Bought my first house 6 years ago and it's been non stop major renos since then. Had to demo the whole finished basement and redo the french drain around the house but that's a story for another time. Today I'll just share a "little" project I'm currently working on to help heating bill and comfort in my home for the upcoming winter. So you may be asking what a dropped soffit is. Here's the dropped soffit in my bathroom:
Basically it a part of the ceiling that has been lowered. In this case where the shower and where the vanity is. Above this is the attic which is unconditioned (freezing in the winter and hot in the summer).
If you already have experience with house construction you probably already see what the potential problem with this is. Basically where the ceiling has been lower, if the builders were lazy they would not seal the soffit and all the nice warm and cold are will go in between the wall framing around the soffit. Guess what the builders did at my house ? You got it! They didn't seal it! On to of that the a hole straight from the attic to the basement where the tub drain is and main plumbing stack so I can feel cold air from outside go straight to the basement. Not only is this bad for heating/cooling bills, it causes mold due to condensation and low humidity levels in the winter.
Here's an infrared picture of the soffit with temperature currently set to ~70F/21.5C inside. The temperature outside is currently 37F/3C.
59F/15C after taking a shower. That's not good... not good at all...
So how to fix it? Well I could destroy the soffit, insulate it and then rebuild the bathroom ceiling. That's messy and don't want to destroy my bathroom ceiling. The next option is doing the air sealing in the attic. This is the usual method done by the air sealing companies.
Luckily I already installed lights in the attic with a partial wood deck. It's still no fun. The attic is cold, full of fiberglass insulation (bad for the lungs and makes you itchy), nails/screws sticking through the roof and mouse poop since the previous owner loved feeding the birds (the mice love bird feed).
Yeah look at that wonderful sight. Guess where the soffit is? If you guess right at the edge of the roof where that light is you are correct! Got to work on my belly for this one.
To be continued...
Basically it a part of the ceiling that has been lowered. In this case where the shower and where the vanity is. Above this is the attic which is unconditioned (freezing in the winter and hot in the summer).
If you already have experience with house construction you probably already see what the potential problem with this is. Basically where the ceiling has been lower, if the builders were lazy they would not seal the soffit and all the nice warm and cold are will go in between the wall framing around the soffit. Guess what the builders did at my house ? You got it! They didn't seal it! On to of that the a hole straight from the attic to the basement where the tub drain is and main plumbing stack so I can feel cold air from outside go straight to the basement. Not only is this bad for heating/cooling bills, it causes mold due to condensation and low humidity levels in the winter.
Here's an infrared picture of the soffit with temperature currently set to ~70F/21.5C inside. The temperature outside is currently 37F/3C.
59F/15C after taking a shower. That's not good... not good at all...
So how to fix it? Well I could destroy the soffit, insulate it and then rebuild the bathroom ceiling. That's messy and don't want to destroy my bathroom ceiling. The next option is doing the air sealing in the attic. This is the usual method done by the air sealing companies.
Luckily I already installed lights in the attic with a partial wood deck. It's still no fun. The attic is cold, full of fiberglass insulation (bad for the lungs and makes you itchy), nails/screws sticking through the roof and mouse poop since the previous owner loved feeding the birds (the mice love bird feed).
Yeah look at that wonderful sight. Guess where the soffit is? If you guess right at the edge of the roof where that light is you are correct! Got to work on my belly for this one.
To be continued...