Helpful? 0

North-facing solar skylight tube a bad idea?

I've been reading a bit of information about the best places to put windows for energy efficiency. I know in Passive Solar buildings you want to minimize or eliminate north-facing windows. But does this rule still apply when doing a solar tube skylight?

Asked by Jason Schaffer
Posted Wed, 12/28/2011 - 17:24
Edited Wed, 12/28/2011 - 17:25

Tags:

1 Answer

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
1.
Helpful? 0

Jason,
I'm not a fan of skylights, whether tubular or conventional.

However, when it comes to conventional skylights, a north-facing skylight generally makes more sense than a south-facing skylight, because south-facing sloped glazing often causes overheating during the summer.

The problem of overheating doesn't really apply to tubular skylights, so you can put one in on your south roof if you want to. However, a tubular skylight represents a hole in your thermal envelope, and will certainly leak heat compared to an insulated roof assembly.

Answered by Martin Holladay, GBA Advisor
Posted Thu, 12/29/2011 - 09:47

Other Questions in Green building techniques

In Building Code Questions | Asked by michael maines | May 23, 12
In Energy efficiency and durability | Asked by Victor Burgos | May 23, 12
In Energy efficiency and durability | Asked by David Slade | May 21, 12
In General questions | Asked by Robert Hronek | May 23, 12
In General questions | Asked by Holger Herrmann | May 23, 12
Register for a free account and join the conversation


Get a free account and join the conversation!
Become a GBA PRO!