The Building Science Podcast show

The Building Science Podcast

Summary: If you're a human being and you live indoors, this podcast is more relevant to your life than you probably ever knew. Exploring the ways building science helps humans thrive in the built environment.

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  • Artist: Positive Energy
  • Copyright: Ecoscience, LLC, DBA Positive Energy

Podcasts:

 A Word From The Producer - The Building Science Podcast | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:13:39

In this short episode, The Building Science Podcast producer waxes philosophical on the history of architecture and the direction of the future.

 Comfort, Health & The Basics of HVAC | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:58:29

What do you really know about your HVAC system? Well wonder no more. We've got you covered! At Positive Energy, we design high performance HVAC systems. Just to be perfectly clear, we design systems that rely on Variable Capacity (VRF) HVAC equipment.  Simply put, installers and mainstream MEP engineers launch into designs thinking about air handlers, plenums and ducts, while we start by thinking about your enclosure, your pulmonary system and health, and how your body perceives comfort. Having a carefully designed, high performance HVAC system is the most sensible way to deliver health and comfort in your home or building. Positive Energy has a team of passionate, creative, and thoughtful engineers and we love what we do. Learn more about our process, outlining the architectural and mechanical design processes to see where we’ll intersect along the way. A quick reference mentioned in the podcast on humidity and asthma:

 Micro/Macro Perspectives: Short | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:09:39

In our very first short episode, the show's producer rambles while gives a brief overview of building science's role in societal change and how it could affect our lives.

 Passive House At A Glance | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:42:49

In this week's episode, we'll take a brief look at the Passive House standard and its role in the US architecture and construction industry.

 Radiant Heating & Cooling | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:32:03

“Why do we heat and cool buildings with air? How did a thermodynamically and physiologically irrational medium of heat transfer - air - become the dominant method of heating and cooling buildings? Water is 832 times denser than air. Energy Density is directly related to the density of a material. Water can capture and channel far more energy per unit volume than air. Thermally active surfaces are built around this basic principle. The human body is a hydronic, thermally active surface system. Heat energy is transferred in and around a body through the hydronic circulatory system. The heart circulates heat through the blood back and forth between the core of the body to its skin, a thermally active surface. Its thermal system is decoupled from its ventilation system. Thermally active surfaces in buildings follow this logic, literally. This alters energy consumption and amends human comfort. Thermally active surfaces in buildings are not metaphors for the body and do not mimic a natural system. Rather, they share the same thermo-dynamical system. In this century, building science and systems will follow how the body actually functions. The human body uses radiant transfer to exchange most of its thermal energy. Buildings based on this logic will significantly amend current patterns of energy consumption and human comfort. Achieve greater human comfort with low air temperature heating and high air temperature cooling. Thermally active surfaces utilize low-supply temperature heating and high-supply temperature cooling to achieve human comfort. This can save an immense amount of energy in the next century of building. Cooling is a deceptive concept. If a building does not get hot, it does not need to be ‘cooled.’ Thermally active surfaces ‘cool’ by continuously removing heat energy. This is fundamentally different from air based approaches to cooling. If a surface is cooler than the bodies and objects in its space, it is removing heat from those objects and has the effect of cooling. There is no circumstance when the surface temperature should be near or at the dew point temperature to heat or ‘cool’ a space. As such, condensation is not an impediment to thermally active surfaces. De-fragment buildings and the building industry. Integrated practices must occur on societal levels in how teams and projects are structured as well as on material levels in the form of simplified, yet higher performing, building systems. Thermally active surfaces engender more deeply integrated design of material and energy systems for more robust buildings. What would change if we heated and cooled buildings with water rather than air? Thermally active surfaces stand to advance architecture’s practices and performances: its techniques, technologies, professional and ecological sustainability, budgets, and formal possibilities.” -Kiel Moe, Thermally Active Surfaces In Architecture In this episode of The Building Science Podcast we explore one of the world's most potent and revolutionary technologies - thermally active surfaces, or radiant heating and cooling.

 A Brief History Of Air Conditioning | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:31:50

How much do you really know about where air conditioning comes from?  From Benjamin Franklin to the vast scientific HVAC advancements of the future. In this episode of The Building Science Podcast, we explore the rich and fascinating history of air conditioning and discover something fascinating about the difference between air and water.

 Glazing & Comfort | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:34:39

In this episode, Kristof interviews lighting consultant Matthew Tanteri on the complexities of the windows we love so dearly.

 Phase Change Materials | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:21:06

If you've ever witnessed ice melting in water, you've seen a phase change. Join us as we discuss the power of this basic physical process and how to harness it to build more efficient homes.

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