Frost penetration into the ground under various conditions the effect of heat from the building is magnified when insulation is strategically placed around the foundation.
Frost unheated attic wall.
The first room when you walk in to the house from the garage is a.
The frost wall explained in above case provides warmth for the building only if the building constructed is a heated building.
As you can see the framing and the electrical wire prevented the insulation from making good contact with the air barrier.
Depending on the temperature and the insolation ie.
That still won t prevent the moisture mold in your unheated bedroom.
Unheated areas of homes.
Check your insulation zone before adding any insulation in unheated areas.
Frost and ice forms in attics when warm humid air accumulates and condenses on the underside of your roof sheathing.
Can sun get to the roof you will have either frost or water collecting.
I believe the cause is heat loss into the garage.
But plumbing pipes in an unheated area such as an attic crawl space and garage are at risk of freezing.
Yesterday i was doing a home energy rating for quality assurance in augusta georgia and the house i was in had a bonus room.
The other factor is the high humidity in the home.
Exposed interior plumbing exposed pipes in the basement are rarely in danger of freezing because they are in a heated portion of the home.
Probably in more place than you think.
This frost could lead to mold in your attic another problem.
An alternative for such issue is to design a horizontal layer placed under the foundation of the entire building.
I have a customer that has frost forming on the inside of his unheated garage walls.
In the photo at left the kneewall is the short wall with the door in it.
Only reducing your interior moisture levels will help.
This type of frost wall won t work for an unheated building type.
The higher the r value the less heat can penetrate.
Insulation is measured in r values or resistance to heat.
In addition to walls and attics insulation should be installed in ceilings with unheated spaces basement walls floors above vented crawl spaces cathedral ceilings floors over unheated garages or porches knee walls and in between interior walls especially bathrooms as well as ceilings and floors.
Not sure where exactly to insulate.
Bonus rooms are often the least comfortable room in a house and the main reason is that they are the most flawed part of the building envelope especially the attic kneewalls.
Often inexpensive foam pipe insulation is enough for moderately cold climates.
The frost in your attic indicates that you may need better ventilation out your roof.
I also recommended insulating the rim joist adjacent to the garage with foam.
A ridge vent could accomplish this.