As corporate commitments to sustainability initiatives continue to gain momentum across the globe, there’s a growing focus on energy conservation. As a result, design professionals face the challenge of meeting increasingly stringent standards to support energy-efficient building construction and operations.
To meet this pressing responsibility, more architects and designers are looking to the building envelope. As the physical and thermal barrier between external environments and internal conditioned spaces, the building envelope has a very close relationship with energy transfer and consumption. In application, it “plays a key role in determining levels of comfort, natural lighting, ventilation, and how much energy is required to heat and cool a building,” reports the Better Buildings U.S. Department of Energy.
In addressing building envelope performance, one way to keep heat transfer to a minimum is continuous insulation (CI)—insulation that is continuous across all structural members without thermal bridges other than fasteners and service openings. Creating CI is one of the most important steps design professionals can take to construct a nearly impenetrable building envelope.To underline this best practice, the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) has required CI across building envelopes in most climate zones both commercially and residentially since 2012. In the pursuit of CI, architects and designers are specifying high-performance systems and building materials—including expanded polystyrene (EPS) rigid foam. A high-caliber insulation intended for roofs, walls and below-grade applications, EPS is becoming synonymous with CI.