A.Martin Holladay, editor
of Energy Design Update,responds: Your
insulation contractor is correct: An interior
polyethylene vapor retarder should not be installed
in North Carolina. During the summer months, when
interior drywall is cooled by a home's air
conditioner, condensation can occur on the back
(exterior side) of the polyethylene. This
phenomenon — called inward solar-vapor
drive — occurs after a rainstorm, when sun
shines on damp siding. As the siding warms up,
water vapor is driven into the wall, allowing
condensation to form on the cool polyethylene. This
is particularly a problem in homes with so-called
"reservoir" claddings — such as brick,
stucco, and adhered stone veneer — and in
homes without foam sheathing.
Evidently, your local building code does not
reflect recent changes adopted by the international
codes. The 2004 supplements to the IRC and the
International Energy Conservation Code (IECC)
abolished all vapor-retarder requirements in
climate zones 1, 2, 3, and 4. Moreover, the most
recent versions of these codes (the 2007
supplements) provide new levels of flexibility in
the remaining requirements for vapor retarders in
climate zones 5 through 8.
Even older versions of most residential codes
never required interior polyethylene. Until
recently, codes defined a vapor retarder as "a
material having a permeance rating of 1.0 or less
when tested in accordance with ASTM E96," a
requirement that can be met with a layer of
vapor-retarding paint applied to the drywall. Show
your local building inspector a can label; you may
be able to satisfy him and conform to current
national energy codes with this low-cost
compromise.
If you can't change your inspector's mind with
education or logic, it might necessary to follow
the path of least resistance and cover your walls
with a so-called "smart" vapor retarder like
CertainTeed's MemBrain (800/233-8990,
www.certainteed.com).
Since the permeance of MemBrain varies with the
relative humidity, it will allow a wall to dry to
the interior during North Carolina's hot, humid
summers.