For the first time ever, I wish there was a 100X Thumbs Up button.
@ArtCooler113 жыл бұрын
As an HVAC professional and perpetual student of building science, I highly appreciated this speech by Dr. Lstiburek, and derived much good info in spite of what some may perceive as caustic delivery from the speaker. Thank you, BerkeleyLab, for making this publicly available on KZbin. It is imperative we get both the envelope and the HVAC system right if we hope to achieve any reasonable measure of "green" to our buildings.
@johnhoffner16092 жыл бұрын
What's happening with the windows is the houses are going under negative pressure homeowners don't maintain their systems happens happens in the Winter time they fireplace they're cooking Really has nothing to do with the windows or the install for the install about building a boat
@anatoliimateienko80 Жыл бұрын
н
@elaineburnett52304 жыл бұрын
I am a home owner, and all I know comes from my interest in building, construction and architecture. I take forerver to understand. However, the more I listen, the more I learn. The big lesson, if you are not rich, you really do need to keep learning. So to all my teachers, thank you!
@Stratoquarius6 жыл бұрын
Extremely interesting, in the 8 years since this was recorded I am currently being taught all of this stuff in detail (mechanical electrical, building science, structural etc) in a 2 year Architectural Technologies program. It seems to me that the message is getting across especially if the next generation of professionals are learning from these mistakes.
@leelaleela1288 Жыл бұрын
ல போன்றபோபோ
@jackjohnson94494 жыл бұрын
This is the best building science video on KZbin. Here we are in 2020 and the design process is as broken as ever. There is so much exterior insulation being installed wrong it has become a joke. Joe is the MAN.
@phil55694 жыл бұрын
This guy is brilliant! And I love how he doesn't sugar-coat issues. Just says it like it is! Bravo Sir!
@jeffmoore23516 жыл бұрын
As a glazier who now owns a 50,s built solid foundation house. Who worked curtain walling systems in Aust England. I get what your saying. As a tradesman, the amount of time I have solid debates with Architects over a design floor we could sit down all night and drink beer. The laws of nature have to be worked with, but a lot of Architects just don't get that brilliant lecture. Let me know if you ever want to come to Australia. I have so many things I would like to talk over with you. Again Thanks . Jeff Moore
@saarangsahasrabudhe86346 жыл бұрын
I just realized: This is who I was aspiring to be my whole life! (I'm an HVAC Mechanical Engineer too.)
@skygh7 жыл бұрын
I don't find doc caustic at all. I've been saying commercial buildings are stupid too particularly the HVAC. I don't see why people would reject the truth because they don't like the package it came in. This guy is spot on.
@NajiHassan11 жыл бұрын
We always enjoy his seminars, very informative and fun to attend
@stevechristensen235111 жыл бұрын
I could watch this all day. Joe is the man!
@locusm3 жыл бұрын
So its 10 years on - did things improve?
@brennangraves6458 Жыл бұрын
The lecture at the Q&A at the end is about the best I've heard in 20 years.
@steveryan60583 жыл бұрын
thanks ! I showed part of your videos to my grade 10 construction class. They loved the parts about venting attics and insulation r values over time. This is what we should be teaching in science class.
@fruitfarmer12 жыл бұрын
You are very professional and can hold an audience captive. Your input is well appreciated and I thank you for your input on KZbin.
@melissalee23658 жыл бұрын
I try to remember that his abrasive manner is probably the result of a lifetime of dealing with unscientific, ridiculously flawed building structures.
@MichaelDillin4 жыл бұрын
He's the man
@viperswhip4 жыл бұрын
@Gene I like the guy saying its the fault of the process...what? Or that asshole saying, this is the design that congress approved...well, that came, presumably from the architect to the engineer, to congress. Do we think Nancy Pelosi got out a ruler and calculator to change anything on there? What? What was he saying congress was supposed to study? We know all this shit already and we knew it in 2010 and 2000 and before.
@litsci18774 жыл бұрын
I don’t think he’s abrasive, but the reflexive sexism and penis jokes are something I don’t put up with anymore. I’ve got a lifetime of training in wincing and going along, laughing, ahaha, and I just don’t now - I walk out, shut off. Because really, your response to being caught in a mistake is to feel emasculated? That’s what it has to be about? I don’t want to deal anymore with a guy who deals with the world that way, even when he’s otherwise a good person. Because too often he needs any kind of relationship with me, or any other woman, to go a certain way or we have to have a masculinity crisis, and this is expensive for women. I don’t like the built-in assumption that the whole world is haw-hawing along with it, too. This sort of thing affects who I hire to work with, to work for me, and to learn from, too. There’s nearly 8 bn people in the world; nobody’s knowledge is all that special. Even in building trades, I can find someone to teach me without the side of thoughtless sexism.
@165Dash4 жыл бұрын
Actually we DO have structural engineering failures but not on the scale of the building science / building envelope failures we see. William Lemessurier...certainly not a boring engineer...had a notable “fail” at the Citicorp Tower in Manhattan that was caught well after the fact but fortunately before catastrophe. Cladding “failures” have been occurring on and off for the past 150 years since the building industry development of the steel skeleton frame and embedded it in masonry walls that (a) experience cycles of wetting and (b) expanded and contracted differently from the steel it encased. The cyclical wear and tear was somewhat ameliorated by virtue of the minimally insulated exterior walls being kept warm. The exterior “stone” cladding of Joe’s contemporary “500 Year Institutional Wall” takes a long time to dry out...not an issue if detailed correctly. What worries me is what happens if uninformed Owners try to insulate existing heavy masonry and steel exterior walls in an effort to be “green” or to meet uninformed future regulations. Constant freeze / thaw stress on facades that can never fully dry out will lead to much costly and dangerous facade deterioration.
@litsci18774 жыл бұрын
Yeah, that’s not something to LOL about. If he can’t keep your attention without being ugly to half the population, he needs to find a new line of work. I don’t go into classes and “keep people’s attention” by joking about how useless husbands are and how glad I am I don’t have one, or by making slurs against other groups of people.
@KYGooglenerd12 жыл бұрын
I enjoy Dr. Lstiburek's delivery, we are polishing turds, LEED is stupidity, and the ego is more important than energy efficient buildings. Preach on brotha!
@robertocorradi63186 жыл бұрын
Brilliant straight talking common sense ............
@matthiasmacandrew58513 жыл бұрын
I would have been laughing NON-STOP! This guy is GREAT! Darn kids missed all of his punchlines! He is just too darn smart for them I suppose :/
@joshtargo68348 жыл бұрын
Ooh this gets good the the end!
@SingCheongChen3 жыл бұрын
Informative and easy to understand. Great job Dr. Joseph Lstiburek & thank you Berkeley Lab
@Josh-wq8tt4 жыл бұрын
I love this. Common sense and a straight shooter.
@davidrankin98747 жыл бұрын
I like this guy...class is in session.
@Beastphilosophy4 жыл бұрын
The greens actually like rockwool as much as he does. It's certainly better for the environment than plastic foam. Generally it's only major drawback is that when used as cavity insulation it tends to be installed wrong like all batt insulation does.
@hightechfab6 жыл бұрын
Great information! Thank you Joe.
@eliahuelmalah77713 жыл бұрын
It is still interesting, especially when not finding good instructive material to build a residential including details showing drarawing and materials fo a good design of walls ect. Thanks
@AA-zq1sx Жыл бұрын
Brilliant presentation... love it everytime Joe speaks. :) You can't argue with good sense (unless you're an architect apparently... lol) Glad that some of these basic ideas/principles he has been advocating for years are FINALLY starting to catch on!
@fredygump55787 жыл бұрын
This is the Lewis Black of building science...and he actually kind'a looks like Lewis Black!
@bradmoule6 жыл бұрын
yo!!! i cant unsee this!! lol
@ladgrove2 жыл бұрын
He is legitimately very, very funny. Brilliant dry, acerbic sense of humour coupled with brilliant, common sense information.
@josephhuether1184 Жыл бұрын
Great lecture! I will say this though… Joe says he’s never received a call from a client complaining “my building is leaking air”. Perhaps that’s the reason architects haven’t been drawing detailed 3-D “air control barrier” drawings…until VERY recently. But many DO draw detailed 3-D roofing and waterproofing drawings…often done by highly paid and skilled consultants. Yes…”bulk water” from rainfall and ground will always be the highest priority. It’s like going to the hospital. The first and foremost issue will be infection control, antibiotics and acute care. Meanwhile nobody will care about your metabolic health and the hospital snack-bar will be full of processed food that can lead to diabetes…20 years down the road.
@barkeater78676 жыл бұрын
hose those architects Doc. im an architect and love it.
@lenaluna49826 жыл бұрын
I do have to add that although research into LEED performance post occupancy is showing LEED projects not performing as intended, the documentation trail LEED required is instrumental in being able to conduct post occupancy evaluations. I can only imagine if LEED not around how much more difficult to do “forensic” building evaluation.
@cariocadenyc8 ай бұрын
This guy speaks the blunt truth about that GSA mess.
@comment68645 жыл бұрын
Office buildings are sooo overairconditioned. I would love to for a change work in a building that had less A/C and maybe even windows that could be opened for normal air. In general office buildings are the most oppressive and uncomfortable spaces imaginable climatically. Really a great case for working from home. Nothing worse than walking through the parking lot on a nice summer day with a warm light breeze and sunshine and then walking into the building and being hit in the face with a wall of cold, heavy, oppressive air. Only remedy is to quickly walk to my desk and turn on the space heater under my desk and breath a sigh of relief. And then stressfully wonder - WHY does it have to be this way?
@barkeater78676 жыл бұрын
GETS GOOD AT THE END
@41BOT6 жыл бұрын
Wonderful man, really enjoying his presentations. I have graduated from technical university, I have structural engineering bachelors degree, we have got ton of stuff to learn, and basically almost none of these fundamental things which is being tought here, even though I always wondered, it didn't really come, mostly it was mechanics + mashup of everything :D I wonder if it is like that in so many other technical universities. +1 on students not being active socially, +anotherone on students being boring, true.
@jackievassallo75234 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! He is not stupid
@rafaelarias97593 жыл бұрын
Dr Joe Lstiburek is a GIFT to MANKIND!
@daveygroves16 жыл бұрын
Dr Joe Lstiburek:, "Life is tuff enough as it is, its harder if your stupid ,... Don't do stupid things!". John Straube Instructor - Building Science, "You got the Rot, We got the time".
@seamussheehy83803 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the knowledge transfer.
@comment68645 жыл бұрын
Wow, where is this building with no A/C?? I want to work there!
@chetlangford21448 жыл бұрын
so if you added sound proof drywall with metal between it. on the outside wall it would mold wouldn't. so is it only for inside walls right?
@vap0rtranz6 жыл бұрын
Folks should know Joe isn't so brash in other lectures. Maybe he slept in one of those all glass hotels the night before and got no rest :) He is on point about Greeny weenie worthless awards. Just yesterday I was trying to find a house that was designed by undergrads and won one of those Solar Decathalon awards. Well, I couldn't find it because the house doesn't exist!! It was an award for a house on paper only! OK house model but it's the same because it didn't get built. That should stop. Don't experiment on us living in these buildings based on untried models or biased baselines and then praise people for not following through. As another example, I found one of the double envelope passive solar homes with Earth berm from the 1980s on the market. Went to take a look because it was being sold by the original owners who had it comissioned. Oh the problems it had were so sad but so basic too: heavy vapor and water damage. Everything Joe talks about here. So this newer age of innovation in building has me skeptical that it's creating problems again instead of sticking to basics.
@SchottenbauerVideos10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video!
@charliebright80276 жыл бұрын
its a learning experience from Rodney Dangerfield.he's a good handle on making a system that's available and been around to laymen forever. its basic fundamentals. and hes right they are being lost and not taught any more because of time. now here the lecturer exposes a comment upon every message hes trying to teach. his style is [read other comments] ton which they feel its abrasive. i think he wastes alot of time. he could give more reference to back uppish genius.
@willingtonortiz3552 жыл бұрын
Thank you .
@JoniAntonio6 жыл бұрын
29:50 Dunkirk Joke... This guy is ahead of his time...
@calbuilder73573 жыл бұрын
I done with you guy! I need a beer! Lol 😂 Joseph is the greatest
@kdmq6 жыл бұрын
Could a drop ceiling return plenum just be changed to a drop ceiling supply plenum? (run the fan the other direction) To generate a positive pressure instead? Would there be other problems resultant of this technique?
@elrolo37114 жыл бұрын
Some of the negative commenters are academic rookies and this is too advanced for them. They should read books that explain the dumbed down basics. Those of us with life experience in both the science and the construction field details really enjoyed this and don't mind the humorous delivery which is mild compared to real construction projects language. I spent 25 years technical and on construction projects, chief building inspector of a city.
@itzelouise87147 ай бұрын
Negative comments are those aware of the typical bully system that everyone is so used to in North America, you are also a proof of that
@justinkruemmel61556 жыл бұрын
Great lecture but around 1:04:00 I don´t understand why there is a discussion being avoided with the member of the audience.
@KarlKoning4 жыл бұрын
It was obvious from the host's reaction that this person was the same one who was blaming everyone other than the designers for the building that failed...there was only a little time left and the host wanted someone else to have a chance to ask questions as this person had monopolized the Q&A time already and was just rehashing his last comments.
@ValeriaVincentSancisi4 жыл бұрын
wow ... sarcasm plus! yes, he is very abrasive even though he is pointing out very very real problems.... you can show that there are problems without attacking everyone! So get that textbook written Lstiburek!
@davidwhite1373 жыл бұрын
It ought to be a requirement to say the right way to build a building, before presenting to the public so all the mistakes in any science. It’d be nice if he told stories of good examples, before ranting on mistakes of others. “Learn from our mistakes” is a fallacious proverb. “We make mistakes and hopefully don’t repeat the same mistake.” We believe In a thousand more things than there is to believe in Judging from experience. Collect absurdities, you become an absurdity. He has knowledge. Wish he expressed what he knew for more than 120 seconds of this talk, instead of the useless information-failures of others.
@MichaelDillin4 жыл бұрын
OMGoodness 😂 love I have no vowels in my last name he is spot-on right and hilarious
@GeorgeHawirkoStyroHome10 жыл бұрын
If we can't get more energy efficiency into our building, then I must say all the experts in the field are over qualified for their positions. What do you think?
@styrohomenews912910 жыл бұрын
Jokes aside, all these STUPID Architects and Builders should scrap the use of WOOD, LEED, and GLASS, but use EPS, expanded polystyrene and concrete composites instead. Tell them straight, no BSing with the insulting jokes, well maybe, just one or two for go measure.
@styrohomenews912910 жыл бұрын
We have developed better ways of constructing our buildings, but the Joes of the Building Science World are holding back and not showing you these, because the private interests are not paying them any money. 1- The Building Industry is in complete disarray. We build with unusable crappy wood then try and invent band aid solutions to hide all the inadequacies of the crap. 2 - So called Experts run the system and win Phoney awards in an attempt to see all the crap they produced. 3 - Dudes like Joe talk big but in reality are just pencil pushers and as I stated Over Qualified Speakers, passing themselves to other Phoney's as Scientists.
@GeorgeHawirkoStyroHome10 жыл бұрын
***** Noted.
@charliebright80276 жыл бұрын
true, Masonite is garbage and it cant be refinished to look new again without hours of paint stripping. filling the holes sand and refinish. tear it all off put on new. do it again 5years later.
@travsb19846 жыл бұрын
StyroHome NEWS Sure thing bud.
@TheLookingOne7 жыл бұрын
Do you know of anyone who has implemented or any resources about an air ondol system that moves air from an attic down to the crawl space and back up to the attic? Is this feasible for attics with blown-in insulation and crawl spaces with a dirt floor?
@charliebright80276 жыл бұрын
sounds like sir circulation alternative method. most conventional are static and they go up and out. not in a re-circulation system like a car. mobile homes had a air-changer system that made sure fresh air was exchanged 3 or 4 times a day. they were based on size and luck. didn't work well.
@charliebright80276 жыл бұрын
yes, manufactured homes are 75 percent like that you are explaining.
@flinch6225 жыл бұрын
Holy facadists batman! I knew I didn't like steel framing in houses before, now I have a new reason why. How any architect failed to notice that steel inside large skyscrapers gets insulated before attaching anything to it is wilful stupidity. One after thought for Joseph: next time you're in California speaking, don't take the first question until after you crack open a beer. Such dumb questions... I thought there was going to be a literal hair pulling moment. Collegiate types whining about having to read white papers and insisting nothing gets learned without a textbook? No wonder the state is in a downward spiral: educators are hooked on format instead of facts.
@jindajinda43534 жыл бұрын
Wow!
@gabrielcodina54662 жыл бұрын
I don't like how these old people want to fight with him. I think there's more hope with the younger generation.
@sfcarp94186 жыл бұрын
Awesome guy , knows his stuff and highly practicle . Canadian humour just like Australian humour . Doesn't translate well to Americans though ...... obviously ! Lol ....
@itzelouise87147 ай бұрын
🙄
@comment68645 жыл бұрын
Tight glass?? I want an open window!
@h2oskiaddict4 жыл бұрын
He's like the Ron White of building.
@michaelbaker97464 жыл бұрын
second video I watched still don't understand maybe its because I'm a painter
@michaelbaker97464 жыл бұрын
don't worry I tell you how stooped I am but getting something out of it
@viperswhip3 жыл бұрын
When is the last time a building fell down...ouch
@phylwilton19668 жыл бұрын
30% glass
@stevesimpson83383 ай бұрын
Isn't the simple answer to all of whining about energy efficiency in these buildings that they weren't designed for energy efficiency? And why would they be? Energy is cheap, and people are willing to pay for buildings that allow in tons of light and look good. Hence all the glass. If people want to pay for energy efficiency, they obviously can. But it's not obvious why they should. I own a house that was built in the 1980s. It's terrible from an energy efficiency standpoint, as most houses built in that era are. I have a heat pump. My electric bill is still less than $200/mo even during hot summers. If my house were built with modern energy efficient building science, it would have been much more expensive. So it's a simple trade off that the homeowner (or building owner) has every right to make. I get the jaded view of "green" on the commercial side, but it's easy to explain. Commercial building owners like to pretend to be "green," because there's a senseless, almost religious commitment to "green" today, without any consideration for cost and tradeoffs. Which is to say, there's no consideration for basic economics. What is the cost of "being green" versus the cost of not being "green?" And what do people prefer and at what cost? The problem with this lecture, and most modern attitudes among engineers and designers, is they don't care what the buyer wants or can afford. They don't care about the difficult tradeoffs and choices that homebuyers and the builders they hire must make in order for real humans (which is to say, middle class humans) need to make. This guy's irritating sarcasm just bleeds contempt for anyone on a budget who wants a house.
@jeremyellis12623 жыл бұрын
Dude sounds like Jeff Goldblum
@illfaptothis3336 жыл бұрын
but how does this help me build better jenga towers. i want answers, doctor.
@kaiwenhe55184 жыл бұрын
Any of you guys work in office? Without glass windows , life is terrible . This guy is excellent in his game ,but also too ignorant .
@michaelbaker97464 жыл бұрын
You have thing thought throw. Thank You The smarter I've been the stupider idiots make me look.
@josephbohme79176 жыл бұрын
Well In 2014 he preaches vented roof and now in 18 he speaks unvented WHAT THE HELL? Clear it up please. Distinguished? when you change opinions every other year I do not feel it.
@metame38035 жыл бұрын
I noticed this too. Example from 2014, starting at 0:56 kzbin.info/www/bejne/gpWboa1_qplofJo. Example from 2017, starting at 4:11 kzbin.info/www/bejne/iGnOq5KKg5x6n6M That's quite the contradiction, and it certainly leads me to question his advice in other areas even though I often find myself nodding yes as I listen to him. He's got lots of useful insight, but he needs to explain why he's flip flopped here. I suspect the real problem is that both vented and unvented roofs have their own sets of problems based upon the myriad of construction techniques and material variables involved. Probably both vented and unvented work if you get the right mixture of variables. The question vented or unvented? is too simplified and a simple answer isn't in order. And given the apparent infancy of the knowledge, the building code really ought to loosen up a little here until the dust has settled.
@CP-ov3ir5 жыл бұрын
I just think he's addressing conditioned rather than vented.
@snapcrack555 жыл бұрын
I think the confusion might be in a missing word "assemblies " www.buildingscience.com/documents/digests/bsd-149-unvented-roof-assemblies-for-all-climates
@snapcrack555 жыл бұрын
Plus the 2014 video seemed to be geared towards home building where as this presentation was aimed at commercial & institutional buildings...
@KarlKoning4 жыл бұрын
He was comparing North & South climates...where the utilities are stored (conditioned or unconditioned spaces) and air exchange rates...with or to meet these caveats, Texas slab on grade homes with the water heaters/air handlers in the attics will have to go to unvented attics e.g. conditioned space. No contradiction if you remember the caveats. He stated the same caveats in 2014 and in the paper snapcrack55 links us to.
@robertmontgomery71586 жыл бұрын
Guy is funny
@clarkpalace3 жыл бұрын
The jokes r just a polite way to entertain. He has too back up his shtick with real world hard won knowledge
@kdean1711 жыл бұрын
99% of them give the other 1% a bad name. :)
@gagnonwill10 жыл бұрын
Funny how he ridicules architects, "greeny weenies" and LEED certification. Green roofs with "dirt" as he calls it and "goats" might be less efficient than "stupid insulation" or white reflective roof but the good news is it's not only about energy efficiency. There's also so much benefits that you wouldn't have from only super efficient insulation (better air quality, less heat island effect, better aesthetics...) I'm an engineering student and I think engineers and architects should work together. Increased ventilation in LEED buildings might be more energy-consuming but what about volatil organic compounds, better air quality and the like? We need an holistic approach and stop bashing about other professions, everyone should work together. In my opinion, he has some good points but an argument cannot be presented with "stupid" as the main reason.
@bigdaddyyc7 жыл бұрын
You're assuming insulated and airtight buildings don't have air changes. Better to have air changes within an airtight structure using ERVs than air changes from a leaky building. Bringing fresh air in without losing all of the energy. Regarding heat island/better aesthetics, that's not the purpose of LEED. What Joe is also doing while exposing the B.S. he sees in his industry is called busting balls. Notice how the architect in the audience made fun of himself and joked back? Don't be overly sensitive, give Joe the benefit of the doubt, after all he has some 30 something years experience in the field and lab.
@emeltea336 жыл бұрын
I believe he said in an other talk that his wife is an architect. More a joke, and he didn't call anybody any names. Relax.
@donchristie4206 жыл бұрын
In another talk, he said Australian do what rats do, then laughed and said his best friend is Aussie
@paintswithglass11 жыл бұрын
exothermic insulation
@johnfitbyfaithnet6 жыл бұрын
paintswithglass out-sulation
@petermauro89724 жыл бұрын
hardee har har, he soooo funny
@larrymaloney8774 жыл бұрын
Please translate, "Fiberglass is a horrible thermal insulation but a fantastic acoustical insulation." Translate "fantastic" to a quantified number and unit of measurement. BTW, are you taking drugs for your artery disease? It's stupid to not know you have artery disease. You DO know, don't you?
@Earth0984 жыл бұрын
This is very informative and could have been much better without all those stupid jokes
@ekim955yt5 жыл бұрын
He must of had a bad childhood.
@Holiday2165 ай бұрын
Some good content, but not a very good teacher/lecturer
@treich12345 жыл бұрын
not sure what's worse, his smug arrogance or his condescending humor
@Crusader18156 жыл бұрын
An unfunny lecturer who thinks he's funny completely ruins any informative quality his presentation might otherwise have had.
@pnwbuilder6 жыл бұрын
Sense of humor, just like common sense, is not very common!
@itzelouise87147 ай бұрын
@@pnwbuilderridiculous
@pnwbuilder7 ай бұрын
@@itzelouise8714yes you are
@itzelouise87147 ай бұрын
@@pnwbuilder you and friends like him, you were looking at the mirror 🤷🏼♀️