Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Tiny House Assembly


The finished tiny house shell!
I am in North Carolina as I write this, because yesterday I was watching and photographing as the SIPs panels were assembled onto the trailer. The trailer has been ready for a few weeks, and the panels were manufactured during the past week. The process of assembling the panels and trailer into a house took only about 5 hours and 30 minutes.
            For a while I had been hoping to do the assembly myself, and I was thinking that I could have done it until the construction team got to putting the roof on. This took two forklifts and six people to accomplish.
            So if materials for the walls are more expensive than they would be in a stick built house and I had to pay someone to assemble it for me, why did I decide to use SIPs? Simply because the SIPs will create a better insulated home, so in the long run, I expect to save money on heating costs.
 Because stick built houses have studs every few feet, a lot of heat can be lost by being transmitted through the wooden studs. This is called thermal bridging. Even if the insulation material in a stick built house has a high R-value, the house can still loose a lot of heat through the wall studs, since wood has a much lower R-value than materials that are designed for insulation.
      Eco-panels makes their SIPs with a polyurethane foam. This is one of the things that first caught my attention about the company. Unlike polystyrene, which is the material most often used for SIPs panels, polyurethane does not outgas any harmful chemicals.
      Eco- panels also makes corner panels at 90° angles and 135° angles. Having one piece corner panels is stronger and better insulating than attaching two flat panels to make a corner. My house uses four of the 90° panels at the corners and two 135° panels at the peak of the roof.
During the assembly, I was given free range of the shop, so I was able to photograph everything. Here is the first round of photos. Check back tomorrow to see a time-lapse video of the assembly.

When I arrived, The floor panels had already been attached to the trailer.

The walls are partly finished in this shot.

One of the 90° corner panels.

Inside of the house. All of that bracing in the middle is just temporary to support the roof. I will put the permanent bracing up in a way that does not take up much space.


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