A.Paul Fisette, director
of Building Materials and Wood Technology at the
University of Massachusetts Amherst and a JLC
contributing editor, responds: According
to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), your house is in a climate
that averages 4,700 heating degree days, 1,000
cooling degree days, 44 inches of rainfall, and 34
inches of snow annually. And according to the 2009
International Energy Conservation Code (IECC),
you’re in climate zone 4. Therefore, your
goal should be to insulate the walls with at least
R-13 wall insulation. It’s reasonable to
assume that water penetrates the brick weather
barrier at least occasionally, but because the wall
hasn’t been insulated in the past, the
wall cavity has been able to dry to the indoors
with little permanent damage. However, the new
insulated wall system should resist water intrusion
altogether, so filling the cavity with blown
cellulose alone wouldn’t be adequate.
The existing balloon framing will make it
difficult to install an exterior housewrap to
protect the cavity wall. Instead, strip the
interior wall surface covering so that you can
spray closed-cell urethane foam directly onto the
back of the brick. To keep the bricks from
absorbing rainwater, first install polystyrene
cathedral roof vent chutes between the studs
against the brick wall, then spray a 1- or 2-inch
layer of foam over the chutes against the brick
wall. This will create an airtight layer around the
exterior of the house while allowing water to drain
down to the weep system at the base of the wall.
Place the chutes from the top to the bottom of
every bay. You can hold them in place temporarily
with caulk or canned spray foam until the
insulation contractor arrives.
Once this system is in place, you can fill the
rest of the wall cavity with R-13 fiberglass batts
(to meet minimum code), cellulose insulation (for a
wall with an R-value of about 20), or foam (for an
R-30+ wall). You probably won’t need a
warm-side vapor barrier if you fill the cavity with
foam or dense-pack cellulose, but be sure to follow
local codes and the advice of your building
inspector.