Submitted by ThinkSharp t3_10l1syy in DIY
The house we moved into has a crawl space with duct work (wrapped and insulated) and plumbing in it. No insulation. We added a vapor barrier and I had the company run it up the side walls along the CMU. Most walls are against soil, one wall is against air. Only 3 vents around one corner area, not doing much.
Now I want to insulate to warm the floors and save energy. Would it be. Water to complete an encapsulation and insulate the side walls, or have the subfloor spray foamed and finish the vapor barrier and add a dehumidifier?
Whatever I do I don’t want to make it colder in there because of the plumbing.
How is this properly addressed?
lovallo t1_j5wb8m4 wrote
Knowing if you are in a heating or cooling dominated climate is helpful here.
You want your thermal barrier and air barrier at the same boundary.
If you insulate the floor the space below will certainly get colder. Would the pipes be in the spray foam? that might be safe enough in terms of freezing. Do you have a sense for how cold it gets down there currently in the winter?
If you insulate the crawl space walls then you will want to seal up the vents to the crawl space.
Moisture is a concern, dehumidification can get expensive. An exhaust fan on a humidistat might accomplish what you need at a lower operating expense.
Since you have pipes and ducts down there I would seal the crawlspace and put in mechanical ventilation and or other moisture control.