Home Energy magazine Contents, March/April 1995
 
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Home Energy magazine

Volume 12, No. 2
March/April 1995

man holding dirty filter


Departments

Editorial
"http://www.eren.doe.gov/"

Letters



Trends

Is an R-19 Wall Really R-19?

Quality Builders Converge on Springfield

CCC Huddles with HUD

PRISM Does Windows


Do you have questions or comments?
Email Home Energy magazine at contact@homeenergy.org

Feature Articles

Shade Trees as a
Demand-Side Resource

by Gregory McPherson &
James R. Simpson

Several utilities have embraced trees as a solar-powered demand-side management resource. What do we know so far about the effects of shade trees on building energy performance?

Combustion Safety Checks:
How Not to Kill Your Clients

by Rob deKeiffer

People who manage or work within programs that provide any significant service inside a building need to be familiar with the basics of combustion and combustion safety.

Beauty and the Beast Upstairs

by David Connelly Legg

The same features that are often added to the top story of homes to give them distinctive architectural beauty can also make them rather beastly to heat or retrofit. One-and-a-half-story houses, like the Cape Cod-style found in New England, are typical of those that pose tricky insulation and air sealing problems.

Ventilating Attics
to Minimize Icings at Eaves

by Wayne Tobiasson, James Buska,
& Alan Greatorex

Using outdoor air to ventilate the space below a snow-covered steep roof is an effective way to avoid icicles and ice dams.

Special Resources Section:
Home Energy on the Internet

by Alan Meier

Useful information on energy efficiency and renewable energy is abundant on the Internet--if you know where to look for it. 


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