Is there any reason houses aren’t cooled by pulling basement air to the roof via a duct along the back of the house, then dumping the cool air down into the top floor? SHouldn’t this, in conjunction with an attic or whole house fan, do a nice job? Is there any hvac guy out there with a holistic approach to these things?


A/C

Comments

  1. This is interesting to me too, smokychimp.

    But wouldn’t it make sense to get the hot air to go out via the roof, so that the cool cellar stays cool? Or is there something I don’t understand?

    Please make a post that explains this. *Content* beyond neighbor-whining on brownstoner forum is a good thing!!!

  2. You can post a picture if you start a new Forum post, but I don’t think there is a way to post a picture in response to somebody else’s post.

  3. Smokychimp, I’d be interested — though I’m not sure how you might post pictures here. Question: would it be any more practical if your aim was to cool only one floor (say, for instance, you wanted to cool the basement floor in a brownstone with air pulled up from the cellar)?

  4. Technically this is called an isolated gain system, and it’s used in green building approaches in new construction. I don’t think it would be useful in a retrofit, as you have to have the whole cycle of air working for you — another path for the return air to be pulled back down to the cellar and cool. Not very practical with conventional brownstone construction.