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Building An Energy Efficient Sunroom

Discover how to build an energy-efficient sunroom and enjoy the warmth of summer all year round while adding home value.
Grace Frank  |  August 9, 2016
Cool weather season may be upon us but there is a way to harness the warmth and sunlight of summer-year round. Adding a sun room to your home adds space and natural light, brings the outdoors in, allows you to enjoy the sun and the stars day, night and year round, adds an elegant touch to your home, and increases your home’s value.
 
The good news is that you can have all of these great things sustainably and by working with contractors who specialize in energy star qualified sun rooms. Energy star qualified windows, doors, and skylights do more than just lower energy bills – they deliver more comfort, create less condensation, and protect furnishings and decorative accessories from sun damage better than conventional clear-glass double-paned alternatives. By lowering your energy use, these windows are also better for the environment: the less energy you use, the less air pollution power plants produce, and the lower your impact on carbon footprint.
 
You can learn a great deal about a sunroom’s energy performance by examining the window and door’s national fenestration rating council (NFRC) label. Contained on that label is information about the U-factor and solar heat gain coefficient performance. The NFRC is an independent, third-party certification organization with industry accepted standards for evaluating and certifying the energy performance of windows and doors. NFRC ratings for U-factor and SHGC are used to judge the performance of windows and doors to determine qualification for energy star. U-factor measures how well a product prevents heat from escaping. The rate of heat loss is indicated in terms of the U-factor (U-value) of a window assembly. U-factor ratings generally fall between 0.20 and 1.20. The insulating value is indicated by the R-value which is the inverse of the U-value. The lower the U-value, the greater a window’s resistance to heat flow and the better its insulating value. Solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) measures how well a product blocks heat caused by sunlight. The SHGC is the fraction of incident solar radiation admitted through a window, both directly transmitted, and absorbed and subsequently released inward. SHGC is expressed as a number between 0 and 1. The lower a window’s solar heat gain coefficient, the less solar heat it transmits. Four seasons sunrooms is a national company that services the chattanooga market and has an energy star certified sun room program.

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