Defining the Definition: Thermal continuity in IMPs

Approximately one-third of Canada’s secondary energy use is the operation of commercial and residential buildings, which also account for the same amount of the country’s annual greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. This issue stretches further than North America, and the search for effective policies to decrease global energy demand is ongoing. Improving the energy efficiency in buildings has become a chief goal of policy makers around the world.

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Ensuring Energy Efficiency: Specifying windows and curtain walls for cold climates

In most parts of Canada, commercial building energy efficiency is significantly affected by conductive heat loss. In the winter, resistance to undesirable condensation on interior surfaces is important. New insulating glass and framing options are available to reduce heat loss and air leakage, control solar heat gain when appropriate, and minimize the potential for condensation.

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Restoring historical architectural woodwork in the construction industry

There is a substantial number of heritage commercial and institutional buildings in Canada. Able to provide productive useful space for decades to come, these projects are culturally significant, serving to define the past and present, along with the cultural landscape in which we live and work. There was a time, not so long ago, when many owners and designers would choose demolition over adaptation and repurposing. Fortunately, many have gotten beyond this thinking and made progressive moves toward creatively adapting these structures.

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Specifying high-performance doors

Often specified for commercial and industrial applications, sectional overhead and coiling door systems have long been relatively static as far as the speed of which they open and close. These doors have been able to increase their opening speeds by changing the sprockets in the motors, using wall-mounted jackshafts. This increase amounts to a few more inches-per-second opening speed, maxing out at about 406 mm (16 in.) per second. Conversely, newer ‘high-speed, high-performance’ doors can achieve up to 2540 mm (100 in.) opening speed depending on model, material, and opening size.

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Air curtains go beyond industrial uses

Air curtains discharge a steady stream of air toward the threshold of an open doorway to separate indoor and outdoor conditions. Aside from helping to keep out the cold or heat, they are also useful in controlling infiltrations of dust and flying insects. Typically mounted inside and atop a doorway, these HVAC components are intended to curb energy losses from openings, and improve indoor air comfort.

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A Tankless Task: Energy efficiency with on-demand water-heating

One of the biggest heating and cooling equipment trends of the green movement over the past 10 years has been the growing popularity of tankless—also known as on-demand—water heaters in new construction and retrofit projects across Canada and the United States. A standard in Europe and Asia for more than 40 years, these space-saving, long-lasting systems provide a constant, on-demand supply of clean, hot water for all appliances and water fixtures simultaneously in high-frequency commercial applications when properly sized.

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