A.Energy and sustainable
design consultant Andy Shapiro responds: Two
factors affect the humidity level in a house: how
fast water is being introduced and how fast it is
leaving. A very tight house doesn’t need a
lot of moisture input to result in high humidity
and condensation on the windows, while the same
amount of water introduced into a very leaky house
won’t raise the humidity much.
You can use a blower door to check the house air
leakage rate, though your wet windows may already
be telling you that it is relatively tight. You can
also check the humidity in the house with a Radio
Shack temperature-humidity indicator. The windows
should tolerate 40% relative humidity without
condensing in cold weather. If they don’t,
then they are part of the problem —
they’re not well enough insulated at the
edges. If the home-owner isn’t willing to
upgrade the windows or add storms, then
you’ll have to lower humidity levels
further.
Showering contributes a lot of moisture to a
home. A bath exhaust fan should take care of it,
but often the fan is missing, undersized, or little
used. Drying clothes indoors also releases a lot of
water. (Dryers should always be ducted outside.)
Every drop of water that goes to houseplants ends
up as moisture in the air. Drying firewood in the
basement can add quite a lot of water. Cooking,
particularly if the occupants don’t use a
range hood that is vented to the outside, can
generate a lot of moisture.
If the house is new, the construction materials
contain literally tons of water that will evaporate
over the first winter. Therefore, condensation
problems that show up the first winter may not show
up again. Poor basement drainage on a wet site can
also be a major source of water. (Your nose will
tell you if there is water in the basement
— you can usually smell the damp or the
mold.) Consistently bringing wet or snowy cars into
an attached garage that is not adequately sealed
from the house can bring in a lot of water.
To solve condensation problems, first reduce the
sources of moisture and then ventilate to get the
humidity down to acceptable levels. I recommend
powered ventilation for all houses. An inexpensive
ventilation approach is to install a quiet,
efficient bathroom exhaust fan, like the Panasonic
FV-08VQ. The fan can either run continuously or be
wired to a control like the Airetrak, which runs
the fan at a constant adjustable speed and has a
push button for 20 minutes of high speed (see
“Simple Whole-House Ventilation,”
8/95).