Historic Preservation: Energy Conservation

With the dwindling supply of energy resources and new efficiency demands placed on the existing building stock, many owners of historic buildings and their architects are assessing the ability of these buildings to conserve energy with an eye to improving thermal performance. This 1-hour interactive online course has been developed to assist those persons attempting energy conservation measures and weatherization improvements such as adding insulation and storm windows or caulking of exterior building joints. In historic buildings, many measures can result in the inappropriate alteration of important architectural features, or, perhaps even worse, cause serious damage to the historic building materials through unwanted chemical reactions or moisture caused deterioration. This brief recommends measures that will achieve the greatest energy savings with the least alteration to the historic buildings, while using materials that do not cause damage and that represent sound economic investments.
Why Take the Class
At the conclusion of the course, you will be able to:
- Define the inherent energy saving physical features of Historic Buildings
- Discuss the devices that contribute to good thermal performance
- Describe how to use operational controls
- Schedule how and when a building is used
- Describe how preservation retrofitting improves the thermal performance of the building
- List the recommended/non-recommended retrofitting measures
- Appraise mechanical equipment in historic buildings
- Assure that the existing equipment works as efficiently as possible
Last Updated: Tuesday, February 07 2012 13:48









