Home Energy Audit and Retrofit Program Helps Make Historic Portland Cottage Cozy and Safe.

Portland home energy audit by Clean Energy Works Oregon contractor Hammer & Hand uncovers carbon monoxide back-drafting and large insulation gaps in 1912 home. A home performance retrofit leaves homeowner Jody Naff happy – a warmer house, lower utility bills and healthier indoor air quality.

Portland, OregonCraftsman home energy remodel through Clean Energy Works Oregon

Portland homeowner Jody Naff’s 1912 cottage was just 1,300 square feet in size, but nearly impossible to heat in the winter. So when Clean Energy Works Oregon (CEWO) launched last year she was among the first to sign up for the program and its financial incentives for home performance improvements. She selected established Portland builder Hammer & Hand to be her CEWO contractor.

“I just wanted to be warm, and I’m so happy with the result,” said Naff. “After the CEWO retrofit I’m using less energy and I’m warm. Before? I kept the heat on just enough so I wouldn’t freeze to death!”

Discussions of home performance retrofits tend to focus on energy efficiency, and for good reason. A well-orchestrated home energy retrofit can bring a 30% gain in efficiency for an older home. But Naff’s experience shows that comfort is an equally important ingredient.

So is health and safety.

“During the home performance assessment I learned that an industrial hood installed by a previous contractor had set up a dangerous situation in my house,” said Naff. “If I ran that hood while my furnace and hot water heater were on, there was a real possibility of carbon monoxide poisoning.”

As is sometimes the case in older homes, dangerous combustion fumes from an old hot water heater were being trapped inside Naff’s house. A primary function of home energy audits (also called home performance assessments) is to uncover these sorts of hidden dangers and to prescribe remedies.With data and modeling results from the energy audit in hand, Hammer & Hand’s building scientists compiled a suite of retrofit measures designed to transform the performance of the client’s historic Portland home:

  • Replace knob and tube wiring.
  • Remove old insulation, air seal, and blow in high-density cellulose insulation.
  • Install an on-demand tank-less hot water heater and high-efficiency furnace.
  • Install a high-performance WhisperGreen continuous exhaust fan to provide fresh air to the house in an efficient, controlled flow.

The result was a marked improvement in Naff’s home environment.

“Now friends and family don’t make fun of me anymore for how cold my house is,” Naff quipped. “And they can take their coats off when they come over.”

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