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Home Diagnosis is the first-ever television series about measured home performance and building science. Grace and Corbett Lunsford use performance testing tools like infrared thermal cameras, blower doors, pressure gauges, and contaminant sensors to diagnose homes with mystery problems across America. The show also features the #TinyLab, the world's highest performance tiny house on wheels, which toured 13,000 miles to 34 cities on the Proof Is Possible Tour in 2016-17.

EP302: LABYRINTH OF AIR LEAKAGE

To begin Season 3, we explore fire- both house fires and wildfires, and dive deep into the science of smoke detectors, flame retardants, how fires spread and how they can be managed.

Ep302: The Labyrinth of Air Leakage

Let’s dig into the single most important dynamic in building science: air leakage. Grace and Corbett Lunsford take you across North America investigating the story of air leakage with visualizations and demonstrations testing this ultimate invisible dynamic, AND the disasters it can lead to in worst cases, including one of the worst mold infestations we've ever seen.

Featured researchers and experts:
Anil and Nilima Mittal- Moldy Home Survivors
Jason Earle- Mold Inspector and founder of GotMold?
Marianne Touchie- Building Scientist at University of Toronto
Delphine Farmer- Atmospheric Chemist at Colorado State University
Elliott Gall- Air Quality Researcher at Portland State University
Jake Nuckolls- Building Performance Trainer at https://buildingperformancecenter.org/

Also featuring NIST net-zero research center (https://www.nist.gov/el/net-zero-energy-residential-test-facility), the House of Pressure, and lots of footage courtesy of Creative Commons and the US DOD. The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.

DIVE DEEPER WITH THESE RESOURCES:

TRANSCRIPT:

01;00;01;14 "- [Corbett] Air does what it wants."

01;00;02;22 "- It was as if the house had flooded"

01;00;03;25 and never been remediated,

01;00;05;09 "and we're like, ""The house hasn't even ever had a leak."""

01;00;07;07 - Something's really wrong.

01;00;08;16 "- All those sorts of chemicals and fumes"

01;00;11;03 "can work their way into our house."

01;00;12;28 "- [Jason] The duct work was so colonized"

01;00;15;04 "that it looked like leopard skin."

01;00;16;26 #NAME?

01;00;18;03 "and can really do whatever they want."

01;00;19;17 "- There's a much better way to do this."

01;00;22;01 "- [Announcer] ""Home Diagnosis"" is made possible"

01;00;23;22 by support from: Broan-NuTone,

01;00;25;29 better air, better life;

01;00;29;04 "by the GOT MOLD? Test Kit, real science, real simple;"

01;00;32;29 "by AirCycler, Retrotec, Rockwool, and RenewAire;"

01;00;38;17 "by generous support from these underwriters;"

01;00;41;04 and by viewers like you.

01;00;42;22 (gentle music)

01;00;45;20 "- How important is air leakage really?"

01;00;48;24 "- If you've watched previous seasons of ""Home Diagnosis,"""

01;00;50;29 "you know that the science of homes"

01;00;52;19 usually starts with air leakage.

01;00;54;22 - But since it's invisible,

01;00;56;16 "it can be hard to remember to take it seriously."

01;00;59;13 "- So quick review of the physics."

01;01;01;03 "There are three forces at work in your home right now."

01;01;04;04 Pressures from outside.

01;01;05;14 - [Grace] Wind.

01;01;06;17 "- [Corbett] Pressures from inside."

01;01;07;20 - [Grace] Fans.

01;01;08;26 "- [Corbett] And between inside and outside."

01;01;10;03 #NAME?

01;01;11;11 "So let's make the invisible visible."

01;01;13;29 (gentle music)

01;01;17;02 "- [Announcer] It's the shields we build"

01;01;19;16 (gentle music continues)

01;01;24;19 and the risks we take.

01;01;26;13 (gentle music continues)

01;01;30;19 "It's the disasters that will test us"

01;01;33;23 (gentle music continues)

01;01;36;28 and what will grow from them.

01;01;42;11 It's real life

01;01;46;04 "and the physics, chemistry, and microbiology"

01;01;49;06 of the science of homes.

01;01;51;02 (gentle music continues)

01;01;56;25 #NAME?

01;01;58;18 "and I am currently in a three-year-long legal battle"

01;02;00;26 "with the largest builder in the United States of America."

01;02;05;28 - [Director] That's fabulous.

01;02;07;03 "I'm gonna hold right there. - Yes."

01;02;08;03 (director laughs)

01;02;09;17 "Essentially, the superintendent that was building our house"

01;02;12;06 "was simultaneously building 21 other houses"

01;02;14;15 at the same time.

01;02;15;20 "So obviously he didn't have the ability"

01;02;17;14 "to really keep an eye on what was going on in our house."

01;02;20;15 And with the construction boom

01;02;21;24 that was happening in Houston,

01;02;23;09 "every subcontractor wants to get in, get out really quick,"

01;02;25;20 make their money,

01;02;26;25 "and do the quickest job possible."

01;02;28;23 "Additionally, in the area of Texas that we live in,"

01;02;30;28 there are no inspections.

01;02;33;04 There's no real permitting.

01;02;34;02 There's no real inspections

01;02;35;04 "by a county organization or a city."

01;02;37;01 "That leaves, really, us as consumers in a bad place"

01;02;40;16 "because a builder has all the power"

01;02;42;00 "and the builder can really do whatever they want."

01;02;44;22 "- So a really fast build of five months."

01;02;48;07 You move into the home,

01;02;50;02 "and within eight months, you are bedridden."

01;02;52;10 "- Mm-hm, and I had never been bedridden before."

01;02;55;01 "- As soon as we moved into the house,"

01;02;56;00 we had problems with the house.

01;02;57;19 "We tried to have the builder fix those problems"

01;02;59;19 with the house.

01;03;01;02 "They did not successfully fix those problems."

01;03;04;08 Or actually, on second thought,

01;03;05;18 "we thought they had successfully fixed the problems."

01;03;07;10 "We became more comfortable in the house,"

01;03;08;22 "humidity became a little bit more controlled,"

01;03;11;10 "but then we thought that was the best"

01;03;13;12 "that we could expect from a house like this."

01;03;16;07 "Between the time that we closed on the house"

01;03;18;13 "and the time that we moved out of the house,"

01;03;20;02 "I believe the HVAC subcontractor came back"

01;03;22;11 "to do some sort of an adjustment or repair"

01;03;25;12 about 45 to 60 times.

01;03;29;04 "We had planned a trip to Las Vegas,"

01;03;30;19 "and because of her health issues, we couldn't go."

01;03;33;07 So I had decided

01;03;35;04 "to put in some recessed lights in our media room,"

01;03;37;18 "and while I was in the attic crawling around,"

01;03;39;28 "I put my hand down in the insulation"

01;03;42;01 and it was soaking wet

01;03;43;24 "and I looked up and I didn't see a leak in the roof at all."

01;03;48;26 "So I started digging around in the insulation"

01;03;50;04 "to try to figure out if it was a pipe leaking"

01;03;51;23 or what was causing the issue

01;03;54;15 "and what I found is that it was an air conditioning duct"

01;03;56;20 "going through a chase down to the first floor,"

01;04;00;05 "and it was squeezed through a hole that was too small."

01;04;02;28 It wasn't sealed

01;04;04;17 "and I guess there was condensation"

01;04;06;07 "that was accumulating outside the duct"

01;04;08;02 causing that to stay wet.

01;04;10;09 "And all the wood in that area was black."

01;04;13;22 "- So we found it totally by accident."

01;04;15;22 "- Yeah, because we had been through"

01;04;17;07 "so many trials and tribulations with the builder,"

01;04;20;01 "we decided let's hire a professional mold inspector."

01;04;23;01 #NAME?

01;04;24;02 #NAME?

01;04;25;09 "She had come in, run a number of tests,"

01;04;27;08 "and found very high mold concentrations"

01;04;30;03 throughout the house.

01;04;31;18 "Not just in that area, but in many areas of the house."

01;04;33;07 - I mean, so bad that it was,

01;04;34;26 "she said it was as if the house had flooded"

01;04;36;27 and never been remediated,

01;04;38;11 "and we're like, ""The house hasn't even ever had a leak."""

01;04;41;03 "- Water leak ever, yeah. - Nothing."

01;04;42;19 "And this was after Harvey, right?"

01;04;44;25 So, like, we're like,

01;04;46;09 """Yeah, it didn't even have a leak during Harvey."""

01;04;48;01 "And so we were just left wondering like,"

01;04;51;03 """How is this even possible, right?"

01;04;53;03 "Like, how do you have such mold growth"

01;04;55;26 when there's never been a leak?"

01;04;57;19 "- For the most part, the dynamic was pretty clear."

01;05;00;05 "You've got a lot of humidity outside."

01;05;03;11 "It makes its way in through the attic ventilation."

01;05;08;01 "And then because of the nature of the HVAC system,"

01;05;12;17 "the house is actually under negative pressure."

01;05;15;10 "So the air is actually being sucked out of the house."

01;05;18;18 "So of course, air being sucked out of a house,"

01;05;21;00 air has to come back in,

01;05;22;21 and so you can follow it

01;05;24;11 "and you can see warm waste air being drawn down"

01;05;28;17 into the interstitial cavities

01;05;31;15 where it's being exposed

01;05;33;01 "to a variety of different temperatures and dynamics"

01;05;35;15 "because you've got duct work in there"

01;05;37;17 "where you're gonna get condensation and drips."

01;05;39;10 That's why you see the ceiling,

01;05;40;15 the drips inside the ceiling.

01;05;42;01 "The ceiling cavity itself seems to be being used"

01;05;45;04 "as an air conveyance system in certain areas,"

01;05;47;11 "which is a big no-no, but also not all that uncommon."

01;05;50;20 "And you can see the real manifestation of this,"

01;05;52;18 the most egregious example

01;05;54;25 "of how bad the mold in that house is,"

01;05;58;10 "is really in the attic around the HVAC system itself."

01;06;03;02 "HVAC systems, in my professional opinion,"

01;06;05;11 "should never be located in an unconditioned space."

01;06;08;13 "You're heating and cooling your air,"

01;06;09;27 "but putting the equipment in the hottest and coldest places."

01;06;12;26 "You're making it work twice as hard."

01;06;14;13 "And you're also introducing the variability"

01;06;16;23 "that there's likely gonna be a lot of air"

01;06;18;26 "going into the system through leaky duct work."

01;06;23;18 The HVAC system in the attic

01;06;25;23 "was completely covered in visible mold."

01;06;29;02 The duct work was so colonized

01;06;31;11 "that it looked like leopard skin."

01;06;34;01 "Really amazing, and everything was very dense."

01;06;37;07 "It was a rat's nest of interwoven flex ducts"

01;06;43;12 "that can never be cleaned by the way."

01;06;45;13 These are temporary at best,

01;06;47;23 "but they're being used as permanent."

01;06;50;17 It's an unfortunate reality

01;06;51;28 "that that is the defacto standard"

01;06;54;23 in most construction these days.

01;06;56;16 "Putting air conditioning systems in unconditioned space"

01;07;00;16 "and then also running these substandard flex ducts"

01;07;04;09 as a primary duct system.

01;07;05;25 #NAME?

01;07;07;02 "that we run into with air leakage testing"

01;07;08;29 "is what to do about the interstitial spaces."

01;07;12;02 "So an interstitial space is the space behind a wall"

01;07;15;17 "that might be connected to other interstitial spaces."

01;07;18;10 "So this is where you see things like your electrical wiring,"

01;07;21;16 your plumbing, your ducts.

01;07;23;26 #NAME?

01;07;25;09 "Every home is going to exchange air from the inside of it"

01;07;28;25 "with the outside at a different rate."

01;07;31;05 "Older homes tend to be really leaky with lots of cracks."

01;07;33;28 So that exchange is really fast.

01;07;36;05 "- Air kind of sneaks into the house"

01;07;38;09 "through a process that we call infiltration."

01;07;41;02 And so you have this wall cavity

01;07;42;17 "that might be filled with an insulation material,"

01;07;45;22 "and depending on the construction of the home"

01;07;47;26 "and where very small cracks and gaps"

01;07;50;11 in the envelope might exist,

01;07;52;25 "over time, what builds up in that wall cavity"

01;07;55;22 "could find its way into an airflow path entering your home."

01;08;01;25 "- Clearly it's a great idea to train people"

01;08;04;19 "who are going into homes doing building science"

01;08;06;25 on actual homes,

01;08;08;10 "but you also have to be able to do it in classrooms"

01;08;10;29 and maybe online nowadays.

01;08;12;16 So we have training props.

01;08;17;11 "This is called a house of pressure."

01;08;19;15 "It's a tiny little plexiglass house you can see into."

01;08;22;06 "You can see you've got a TV with a aerial going through"

01;08;25;16 "and making a hole in the attic floor"

01;08;27;15 and coming out through the roof.

01;08;29;17 "And we've also got this big duct system"

01;08;31;14 "that you can see we've got a supply and a return on."

01;08;34;03 "And if I wanted to, I could show you what happens"

01;08;37;01 "when your supply side of your duct system leaks to outside,"

01;08;40;15 vice versa on the return side.

01;08;43;12 "And obviously this is a little simplistic,"

01;08;45;18 not very sophisticated.

01;08;46;25 "There's a much better way to do this,"

01;08;49;08 which looks like this.

01;08;51;08 This is a big house of pressure

01;08;53;08 and we've got Jake Nuckolls

01;08;54;18 "here at the Building Performance Center in Washington"

01;08;56;04 "that's gonna show us how all this works."

01;08;58;05 "- So we use these props specifically"

01;09;00;07 "as people are gaining an understanding"

01;09;02;02 "of how air moves through a building."

01;09;05;07 "And one of the things that we love to play with"

01;09;07;08 is just the idea of pressure.

01;09;08;21 "We have the ability to turn on a duct system."

01;09;11;20 "The blue is the return down here."

01;09;14;06 "The red ducts that you can see here"

01;09;15;29 "with the little fancy ribbon out the top,"

01;09;17;28 that's the supply side ducting.

01;09;20;17 "We also have normal elements of a house."

01;09;24;01 "We've got openings in the house like doors."

01;09;27;01 "We can open different areas that replicate windows."

01;09;30;13 "We can have connections between floors here."

01;09;33;05 "So these little sliders here open up gaps"

01;09;35;11 "between the attic and the main body of the house."

01;09;37;23 "What we like to do is set up our manometer outside"

01;09;42;09 and feed that tube inside

01;09;45;03 "so that we can begin by getting a pressure for the house."

01;09;49;03 So what we like to start with

01;09;50;08 "is obviously our baseline measurement,"

01;09;52;06 "which isn't gonna be a huge difference"

01;09;54;19 "because we're testing inside of a house"

01;09;56;22 inside of a warehouse.

01;09;58;08 "But in this case, we do have a small amount"

01;10;01;07 "of pressure buildup that's inside of our little space here."

01;10;04;12 "And I'm gonna start messing with the ventilation systems"

01;10;07;17 that are inside this house.

01;10;09;01 "Around the side here, we've got a bunch of switches"

01;10;11;11 "where we can operate the kitchen fan, bath fan, and dryer."

01;10;15;27 "And what I can do is choose which one of these"

01;10;17;25 "I want to start to have operational,"

01;10;20;06 to have non-operational,

01;10;21;27 "and I can set these up for our learners to come in"

01;10;24;11 "and find which is the worst pressure"

01;10;26;14 that's possible in the house.

01;10;27;21 That's typically where we start.

01;10;29;05 "So I'm gonna turn on a kitchen fan and a bath fan"

01;10;33;07 "and you'll see we've color coded these lights"

01;10;36;04 "so that we can see when they're actually running."

01;10;38;16 And we take a look

01;10;39;24 "at what kind of pressure difference we've made"

01;10;41;20 inside of this test house.

01;10;43;08 "This is a small house, this is a tiny house,"

01;10;45;27 "but what we're trying to replicate"

01;10;47;09 "is the adjustment to the changes that happen"

01;10;50;20 "with the pressures inside of our normal houses,"

01;10;53;11 "and allowing our learners to start to recognize"

01;10;57;08 "how different ventilation systems"

01;10;58;29 "will affect the rest of the house."

01;11;00;27 "So let's add our dryer to the situation."

01;11;04;03 And we can now see what effect

01;11;06;29 the dryer has had on this house

01;11;08;27 as it stands right now.

01;11;12;26 "So we've turned on all of our fans."

01;11;15;16 "Now we're gonna see what effect the duct system has."

01;11;18;18 "So I'm gonna turn on this little rheostat over here."

01;11;23;06 "We can verify that our supply registers"

01;11;25;20 "are actually blowing the air out into the space."

01;11;28;02 "We have nice ribbon coming out the top"

01;11;30;02 on each one of these sides here.

01;11;31;21 "And very lastly, we can close bedroom doors."

01;11;35;12 "And now we've got all of our fans turned on,"

01;11;38;13 "we've got the duct work turned on,"

01;11;40;00 and now we have closed the doors

01;11;41;22 "and limited the access to this space"

01;11;44;23 "and we can see a massive pressure change."

01;11;47;09 We went from 1.5 negative

01;11;49;21 to -5.6, 5.7.

01;11;53;08 "One of the reasons why we test pressure in houses"

01;11;56;14 "is to see how the air can move from the outside"

01;12;00;13 to the inside of our houses.

01;12;01;18 "And in often cases, it comes through places"

01;12;03;28 "that we don't want that air to come through."

01;12;07;04 "And in this case, we are measuring a fireplace."

01;12;09;23 "So in that living room space, we have a fireplace"

01;12;12;03 "and we've depressurized this area."

01;12;16;04 "Now, watch what happens to this smoke,"

01;12;18;20 "this little smoke pencil right here,"

01;12;20;15 "when I put this smoke up near the chimney."

01;12;26;04 "You can see the direction that that smoke is going"

01;12;29;07 "is straight down the chimney and into the house."

01;12;33;01 "Now, it's fairly obvious why we would care"

01;12;35;22 "that that smoke is going back inside the house."

01;12;38;03 "If we have a fire going during the winter time"

01;12;41;25 "and our house is set up like this,"

01;12;43;16 the smoke from that fireplace

01;12;45;05 "and all the additional particulate matter and toxins"

01;12;48;11 "are coming into our breathable living space,"

01;12;52;08 "something we want to avoid at all costs."

01;12;54;27 So additionally with fireplaces,

01;12;57;08 "we also want to check our adjacent spaces."

01;13;00;09 "This, you can see by our vehicle right here,"

01;13;02;18 "is our garage, our makeshift garage,"

01;13;05;11 "and any pathway from this garage into the house,"

01;13;09;27 "we have the potential to draw toxic fumes, gas."

01;13;16;09 "I mean, people store all sorts of things in their garage."

01;13;17;16 "And all those sorts of chemicals and fumes"

01;13;20;04 "can work their way into our house."

01;13;21;25 "And you can see here, my smoke is drifting"

01;13;25;16 right alongside that duct system

01;13;28;08 "into the living space of the house."

01;13;31;14 "So when we talk about pressure in a home,"

01;13;34;16 "we're not just talking about random numbers on a screen."

01;13;38;11 "We're not talking about certain regulations that we have"

01;13;42;18 "that we want to achieve when we go out to a house."

01;13;46;04 "We don't necessarily need to hit a specific number"

01;13;48;20 on our manometer.

01;13;50;01 "What we want to see our pressure testing as"

01;13;52;28 "is really a way to measure the health to a certain extent"

01;13;56;27 of the houses that we're in.

01;13;58;16 "Pressure in a house might relate to blood pressure."

01;14;01;20 "Your blood pressure gets too high, you have problems."

01;14;04;10 "Your blood pressure gets too low, you've got problems."

01;14;06;17 "You're at two ends of the extreme."

01;14;08;11 "And we want to measure what that pressure is"

01;14;11;13 that's happening in this box

01;14;13;26 "to relate to the houses that we live in"

01;14;16;16 "in order to measure their health as well."

01;14;19;15 #NAME?

01;14;22;06 If we just work in a lab

01;14;23;24 "and we do this in the equivalent of a test tube,"

01;14;26;19 then we would miss

01;14;27;26 "all of the rich and interesting chemistry"

01;14;30;01 "that is what makes a home a home."

01;14;32;08 "We would miss the microbes that live on the dust"

01;14;35;15 in the corners of the house.

01;14;36;28 We would miss that for years,

01;14;39;03 there's been permeation of gases

01;14;40;25 "from people being inside the house"

01;14;42;23 "into the paint and into the drywall."

01;14;44;29 We would miss the reality

01;14;46;29 "of real light coming through the windows"

01;14;49;06 and sparking chemical reactions.

01;14;51;00 "What we really needed was a house"

01;14;53;04 that was really well understood,

01;14;55;20 "one where every temperature on the wall was measured,"

01;14;59;16 "where the pressure in the house was really well understood,"

01;15;03;25 the air flows inside the house

01;15;06;04 "between each room and each floor,"

01;15;09;03 "between the basement, the first floor,"

01;15;10;26 the second floor, the attic.

01;15;12;10 "We need to actually work in a real-world environment"

01;15;15;28 "where there is paint on drywall that's built with insulation"

01;15;20;16 and it's got siding behind it.

01;15;22;16 We need a real home.

01;15;23;29 "We need a place where the air permeates"

01;15;26;24 "between the indoor and the outdoor environment,"

01;15;29;22 even if it's really slow.

01;15;31;04 "We need to understand that, right?"

01;15;32;20 "But we need those processes to occur."

01;15;35;11 "And so that's what brought us here to NIST,"

01;15;37;24 is that this is a house here

01;15;40;05 "where it's incredibly well understood,"

01;15;43;00 it's very well modeled,

01;15;44;19 and so we don't need to worry

01;15;46;03 "about how air moves around the building."

01;15;50;10 "We just get to ask the questions that we wanna ask."

01;15;54;21 "We've been frying up a lot of bacon"

01;15;56;22 "to create lots of particles in a home"

01;15;58;15 "so that we can watch how those particles move"

01;16;01;04 through the house.

01;16;02;18 "And we really can see them move from the kitchen"

01;16;04;28 "upstairs to the various bedrooms."

01;16;07;07 "We can watch that particle pollution move with time."

01;16;11;04 "But we also can do experiments like ask what happens"

01;16;15;17 "if you have an air pollution event"

01;16;18;23 "and you bring ozone into your house after you've cooked?"

01;16;22;25 "And it turns out to be pretty exciting chemistry."

01;16;26;08 So all of the oils

01;16;29;13 "and other very lovely smelling remnants"

01;16;33;12 "of your bacon or your fish sticks or your chicken nuggets,"

01;16;38;20 "once you have some gases in the air"

01;16;40;10 "and you have some oils on the surfaces,"

01;16;42;23 "if you add in ozone, air pollution,"

01;16;45;28 "then you can make these tiny little new particles"

01;16;49;19 "and you can spur all sorts of interesting chemistry"

01;16;52;17 "that we're beginning to track down and trace"

01;16;54;19 and figure it out.

01;16;56;01 "So the cooking experiments aren't just about,"

01;16;59;05 "what do you breathe when you cook?"

01;17;01;15 "They're really about what happens"

01;17;03;12 "when air pollution enters your home"

01;17;05;10 having done everyday activities.

01;17;08;22 "- Yes, when I first walked in the house,"

01;17;10;14 "I asked Anil if he had kept the air conditioning on"

01;17;14;05 "because I noticed that it was cool."

01;17;16;25 And he said yes.

01;17;17;29 That was reaffirming

01;17;19;05 "because the reality is, is that most people"

01;17;21;01 "who leave a house because of these conditions"

01;17;23;17 "will often turn off the utilities."

01;17;25;26 "They'll turn off the heat or the air conditioning."

01;17;27;28 "We call that vacation home syndrome."

01;17;29;24 This happens a lot where,

01;17;31;11 "you know, everyone's gone to a place"

01;17;32;24 "where they open up the door for their vacation"

01;17;34;13 and they smell that smell.

01;17;35;22 "And that's because someone decided"

01;17;37;06 "they were gonna save a couple hundred bucks"

01;17;38;08 on the utility bill

01;17;39;06 and then they cost themselves

01;17;40;04 many, many thousands of dollars

01;17;41;09 "in mold remediation bills instead."

01;17;43;05 "And so seeing that Anil was responsibly conditioning the air"

01;17;51;08 was reassuring.

01;17;52;06 But even so, and perhaps also,

01;17;55;15 "perhaps because of all of that cooling,"

01;17;57;24 we're seeing condensation form.

01;17;59;18 "But that's the way the building is supposed to be managed,"

01;18;02;05 "and it's manifesting as uncontrolled mold growth."

01;18;05;10 "So if you're doing what you're supposed to be doing"

01;18;07;05 in a climate like this

01;18;08;16 "and it manifests as significant pervasive mold growth,"

01;18;12;25 something's really wrong.

01;18;14;22 - One thing we've learned

01;18;16;09 "watching these houses go up around us"

01;18;18;04 is that they go up very quickly,

01;18;20;01 "they all go up in the exact same manner,"

01;18;22;08 and they go up without regard

01;18;23;26 "to the correct order in which you build a house."

01;18;26;28 "They're trying to keep a schedule,"

01;18;27;29 they're trying to close on time,

01;18;29;24 "and you can see when these houses are going up"

01;18;32;22 "the type of problems they're going to have in five years"

01;18;35;00 and 10 years and 15 years.

01;18;36;08 "These are not houses like our parents had"

01;18;38;23 "where they last for 50, 60, 70 years."

01;18;41;24 "You're lucky if you get 20 years out of one of these houses"

01;18;44;04 without a major rebuild.

01;18;46;07 "They're using materials that are not tolerant to mistakes."

01;18;49;06 "And there are a lot of mistakes made"

01;18;50;21 by a lot of subcontractors

01;18;52;06 "trying to do a lot of work in a little bit of time."

01;18;55;00 If you're in a situation

01;18;56;08 "where you have to buy a production built house,"

01;18;58;14 "if you can, visit the house every day,"

01;19;02;14 "educate yourself about basic building practices,"

01;19;04;27 "educate yourself on basic building science,"

01;19;07;12 watch them like a hawk,

01;19;09;07 "and then move out of that house in five years,"

01;19;12;28 "because building a house is a complicated process"

01;19;15;03 "and if you don't have somebody there watching that process"

01;19;18;01 "and stopping and halting work when it needs to be halted"

01;19;20;19 to fix an issue

01;19;22;04 "instead of just trying to meet a closing schedule,"

01;19;23;28 you will have problems.

01;19;25;10 (gentle music)

01;19;27;05 "- [Corbett] Humid air getting pulled inside is bad enough,"

01;19;29;28 but this recent client of ours

01;19;31;19 "was breathing air coming down the chimney,"

01;19;33;29 which is a perfect case

01;19;35;11 "for why we never recommend indoor fireplaces"

01;19;37;19 in modern homes, even ventless.

01;19;39;27 Those are bad for us too.

01;19;41;15 "In this case, we tested how much suction"

01;19;43;25 the house was creating

01;19;45;07 "through the bath fans, kitchen exhaust, duct leakage,"

01;19;48;07 and the dryer.

01;19;49;14 "And of course, we had to relieve that suction"

01;19;51;24 "with intentional make-up air from outside."

01;19;54;18 "But they also ended up removing the chimney completely"

01;19;57;25 so they'd never have to worry

01;19;59;02 "about getting sick from soot again."

01;20;01;14 Take this story with you

01;20;02;21 "when you plan your future living room."

01;20;04;13 "Fireplaces go outside in the 21st century."

01;20;07;21 (gentle music continues)

01;20;10;12 "- My main focus in my research group"

01;20;12;05 is multi-family buildings.

01;20;13;23 "I think it's an incredibly interesting building type"

01;20;15;28 "because they're often high rise buildings,"

01;20;18;05 "so they see a lot of air leakage issues"

01;20;20;13 "that we might experience in high-rise commercial buildings,"

01;20;23;13 "but at the same time, these are people's homes"

01;20;25;17 "and everybody uses their home in a different way."

01;20;27;23 They might open their windows,

01;20;29;04 they might be cooking,

01;20;30;12 they might be smoking.

01;20;31;27 "So in our research, what we're really interested in"

01;20;34;20 is air leakage between suites

01;20;37;19 "and how air moves between the zones within the building."

01;20;40;18 That influences things

01;20;41;25 "like contaminants from the parking garage"

01;20;44;00 getting into occupied spaces.

01;20;46;10 "Uncontrolled air leakage influences things"

01;20;48;11 like how effective

01;20;49;20 "the central ventilation system can perform."

01;20;52;13 "And then looking at that from the occupant side of things,"

01;20;55;08 "uncontrolled air leakage means odor transmission,"

01;20;57;22 "it means sound transmission, it means pest transmission."

01;21;00;21 "So there are a lot of negative consequences to occupants"

01;21;03;28 "if we don't have that air leakage under control."

01;21;07;16 "When we look at air leakage at the suite level,"

01;21;10;19 "it becomes a lot more complicated than a single-family home"

01;21;13;03 "because the suite is surrounded by suites"

01;21;15;10 above and below, side to side,

01;21;17;17 and then you have the corridor.

01;21;19;00 "So five sides of your suite are actually adjacent"

01;21;22;28 to other interior spaces.

01;21;25;08 "So the way we go about conducting"

01;21;28;03 air leakage testing in a suite

01;21;29;19 is an approach

01;21;30;27 "that's called sequential pressure neutralization."

01;21;33;04 Let's break it down.

01;21;34;16 "So if you start off imagining your single suite."

01;21;36;19 "You're pressurizing and depressurizing that suite"

01;21;38;17 "just as you would a single-family home."

01;21;40;27 "But then one by one, you pressurize the adjacent suites."

01;21;45;17 "Now, each time you pressurize an adjacent suite,"

01;21;48;12 "the effect of air leakage across that boundary"

01;21;52;12 "separating the suites drops away."

01;21;55;06 "And so as you add suite by suite,"

01;21;57;26 you can isolate the leakage

01;21;59;21 "of each of the six sides of the suite."

01;22;02;09 So using this testing approach,

01;22;03;29 "we need six or seven fans, lots of pressure gauges."

01;22;07;06 "It takes about eight hours to do one test,"

01;22;09;28 assuming that all goes well.

01;22;11;22 "But it provides us a really rich data set"

01;22;13;22 where we can understand

01;22;14;27 "exactly where the leakage pads tend to be."

01;22;18;29 "So in most multi-family buildings,"

01;22;21;01 "the luckiest of the six sides of the suite"

01;22;24;19 is the corridor-suite partition.

01;22;27;17 "The ventilation systems in most multi-family buildings,"

01;22;30;05 "be they post-war or new buildings,"

01;22;32;23 "tend to be what we call a pressurized corridor system."

01;22;35;29 These systems are designed

01;22;37;13 "to positively pressurize the corridor relative to the suite."

01;22;41;27 "So kind of imagine blowing up a balloon,"

01;22;43;17 "trying to force the air from the corridor into the suites."

01;22;47;11 "In these buildings, you'll tend to see undercuts in the door"

01;22;51;04 and that's there by design

01;22;52;19 "to allow that transfer of outdoor air"

01;22;54;20 "to move from the corridor into the suite."

01;22;57;16 "However, when the weather starts to get colder outside,"

01;23;01;16 "we tend to see stack effect acting on these buildings."

01;23;05;09 "And as you might imagine, the taller the building,"

01;23;08;01 the greater the stack effect.

01;23;09;25 "You have the ventilation unit on the roof"

01;23;12;28 trying to force the air down

01;23;14;28 "while stack effect, at a much greater pressure,"

01;23;17;24 is pushing the air up.

01;23;20;00 "So the net effect is that you end up"

01;23;22;09 "having negative pressurization of corridors"

01;23;25;02 at the bottom of the building,

01;23;26;14 "so air now being sucked from the suites"

01;23;29;10 into the common corridor space,

01;23;31;05 "and then being driven up through vertical chases"

01;23;34;09 "like elevator shafts, garbage shoots, stairwells,"

01;23;38;11 "into the suites at the top of the building."

01;23;41;16 "So when it comes to controlling interzonal airflow"

01;23;44;01 "or suite-to-suite transmission of air,"

01;23;46;16 it's actually more effective

01;23;48;03 "to tighten up the elevator door and the stairwell door,"

01;23;51;22 "cutting off those vertical shafts"

01;23;53;16 that really drive stack effect,

01;23;55;04 "than tightening up the enclosure."

01;23;58;25 One of the other big challenges

01;24;00;10 "we see in multi-family buildings is acoustic discomfort."

01;24;03;14 "So related to what your neighbors are doing,"

01;24;05;17 they might be watching TV,

01;24;06;21 "they might be bouncing a basketball,"

01;24;07;29 they might be moving furniture,

01;24;09;13 "because we know that a lot of sound transmission"

01;24;11;07 "is actually airborne sound transmission."

01;24;13;21 "And so rather than using this really complex,"

01;24;16;19 very time-consuming method

01;24;18;15 "called sequential pressure neutralization,"

01;24;20;26 "can we simply set up a loudspeaker in one side"

01;24;23;10 with a mic on the other side

01;24;24;22 "and get an idea of what the air leakage"

01;24;28;00 of those partitions are?

01;24;29;14 "So it can certainly be used as a screening tool."

01;24;33;01 "It's very difficult to actually quantify air leakage"

01;24;36;14 using that acoustic method,

01;24;38;05 but it certainly provides

01;24;40;06 "a potential easier, more cost-effective, quicker test method"

01;24;44;26 "to figure out which are the partitions"

01;24;47;01 "that you might wanna pay attention to"

01;24;48;19 "when you're considering an air tightness type retrofit."

01;24;54;09 "- So after meeting Anil and Nilima"

01;24;56;13 "and taking a walk through the home,"

01;24;59;05 none of it is very surprising

01;25;00;22 "in terms of the health issues she's dealing with."

01;25;04;12 "But in terms of the extreme nature of this,"

01;25;07;22 "I would say it falls into the top 1%."

01;25;10;17 And the reason for that

01;25;11;24 "is not so much that there's so much mold,"

01;25;15;00 "but rather that there's so much that's not visible."

01;25;18;28 "Once we started pulling down speakers"

01;25;21;25 "and going into the interstitial wall cavities,"

01;25;25;15 the density of the mold

01;25;27;16 "and the scope of the infestation was remarkable."

01;25;32;13 "You see visible mold from the air flows"

01;25;35;09 "coming out of electrical outlets in interior rooms."

01;25;39;08 "It looks a lot like the tip of the iceberg, right?"

01;25;42;13 That little tiny bit,

01;25;43;23 "that few percent that sits above the surface,"

01;25;47;14 "this is a perfect example of exactly that."

01;25;51;00 "- When you know what to look for,"

01;25;52;14 "you start to see the labyrinth of air leakage everywhere."

01;25;56;01 #NAME?

01;25;57;26 "And as you saw with Anil and Nilima,"

01;25;59;26 "it can become very dangerous very fast."

01;26;02;08 "- If you wanna be in control of your home,"

01;26;04;09 start with controlling your air.

01;26;06;23 "- Next episode, we'll explore another thing"

01;26;08;28 "that comes through those gaps and cracks: critters."

01;26;12;06 "- To learn more about how to apply this science"

01;26;14;18 to your own home,

01;26;15;22 visit homediagnosis.tv.

01;26;18;01 We'll see you later.

01;26;19;07 (mellow music)

01;26;31;23 (mellow music continues)

01;26;45;05 (mellow music continues)

01;26;55;07 "- [Announcer] ""Home Diagnosis"" is made possible"

01;26;56;26 by support from: Broan-NuTone,

01;26;59;04 better air, better life;

01;27;02;11 "by the GOT MOLD? Test Kit, real science, real simple;"

01;27;06;04 "by AirCycler, Retrotec, Rockwool, and RenewAire;"

01;27;11;19 "by generous support from these underwriters;"

01;27;14;06 and by viewers like you.