Insulated Concrete
Insulated concrete forms (ICF's) are changing the face of home building and construction. It used to be that you
had limited options if you were building a new house. Conventional wood frame wall construction dominated the home
building market. All of the building trades almost reached a point where they didn't know how to do anything but
wood frame walls when it came to building a new house.
You could get a house with all brick walls if you wanted one but even that became little more than a masonry
facade over a wood frame construction core. The need for high wall insulation for heating and cooling made it
impractical to have an all brick house without insulation so the all brick house ended up evolving into a wood
frame building with a brick veneer or facade.
All concrete houses were simply ugly 40 years ago. The building trades didn't really have many cost effective
options for finishing off the outside of a concrete wall so it ended up bare or painted. The look became popular
with office and government buildings but it was terrible for homes. And of course the problem with insulation was
just as bad with concrete walls as it was with brick walls.
All of that has now changed with the invention of ICF's. The concept is really very simple. An ICF combines a
conventional reinforced concrete wall with modern rigid foam insulation and does so in a way that is labor and
material efficient and cost effective. Most ICF's today are made up of 3 basic parts. The first part is the inner
layer of rigid foam insulation. Each piece is usually 2 to 3 inches thick, 30 to 40 inches long and 12 to 16 inches
high. You cut and interlock as many pieces as you need to form the inside of the wall. The second part is the outer
layer of foam. Usually it is identical to the inner layer of foam but many companies now have provision on the
outside for attaching vinyl or wood siding or some other outside house finish. The third part to the system are
wire or plastic connectors that connect the outer foam to the inner foam with a 4 to 12 inch gap in between for
pouring the reinforced concrete wall. So when the wall is done you end up with a sandwich of 3 layers. Rigid foam
insulation, then reinforced concrete wall and then another layer of rigid foam insulation. Because of the
connectors the foam becomes a permanent part of the wall and building.
With old-fashioned concrete walls you had to construct a form to hold the concrete in place while it cured and
then remove the form after the concrete was hard. A lot of work was involved and you ended up with a wall that was
strong but had almost no insulation value. But with ICF's the foam does four things all at once. It acts as the
form for the concrete, insulates the wall, forms a vapor barrier for the wall and also acts as an excellent surface
for attaching inside and outside final finishes. It goes in easy and you don't remove it when the concrete is
cured. You can use ICF's from the footings of a building all the way up to the roof. You end up with a building
wall that is superior in almost every way. Much stronger walls, magnificent sound barrier and thermal mass
advantages, easier to heat and cool and no wood to rot and grow mold are all powerful advantages of ICF
construction. Because the outside siding options are the same with either ICF's or conventional wood frame
construction your home will fit into the neighborhood perfectly. From the outside the only thing that would look
different is the walls are thicker compared to a wood frame building
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