Looking for an estimate?

A licenced installer can provide you with a custom estimate

Want more information?

We are here to answer your questions

Did You Know?

Uponor PEX-a Plumbing has been used in Europe for decades

Products
Firesafety
 

 Highlights

  • 22,000-square-foot home uses radiant heating to maximize comfort and energy efficiency, while reducing allergens
  • Uponor snow-melt system keeps walkways, driveways and other exterior areas clear of ice and snow during the winter months
  • Project earns an honorable mention award in the Uponor Dream Home Competition

 Background

Radiant a Must…

Home builder Sally Russell is an impassioned advocate of radiant floor heating. So it was no surprise when she specified radiant as the primary heating source, rather than a conventional forced-air system, in one of her most recent projects: a 22,000-square-foot, custom home on three acres in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills. Russell favors radiant not only because it is more energy-efficient, but also because it provides a healthier, cleaner environment with more consistent room temperatures.

Installation process at the Bloomfield Hills home

 …Plus Snow Melt, Too

An Uponor radiant floor heating system warms more than 90 percent of the interior of the Bloomfield Hills home. In addition, an Uponor snow melting system was employed to keep the driveway, porte-cochere, terrace, walkways and other outdoor areas snow- and ice-free during the winter months.

As you might expect, the structure has many rooms with high ceilings and numerous windows, making it easy for heat to escape. A conventional forced-air system would also have created a large temperature gap between the floor and those tall ceilings. A radiant system, however, quickly and evenly disperses the heat where it is needed most – at floor level, to better warm people and surrounding objects. With radiant heat, cold-air drafts are eliminated and temperatures remain steady throughout each heating zone. The payoff? Thermostats do not need to be set so high to achieve a desired comfort level, which is why radiant heat is more energy-efficient than forced-air.

“Sally has been known to turn down projects where prospective clients insist on having forced-air over radiant,” says installer Daniel Bertolini, whose company, Aero Heating and Cooling of Harrison Township, Mich., installed the radiant system. “She wants a heating and cooling system that makes every inch of the homes she designs and builds as comfortable as possible.”

 Benefits

Lower Energy Bills
During the coldest month of the winter of 2005-2006, the home’s interior bill was around $1,200. Installer Daniel Bertolini credits the radiant heating system and the use of blown-in cellulose insulation, explaining that “a similar structure using forced air would cost about 20 to 40 percent more to heat.”
Versatility
Superior Interiors
Better Air Quality

 Project Data

Structure Size 22,000 square feet

Tubing Type Wirsbo hePEX™ plus

Amount of Tubing 20,000 feet of 1/2" tubing for in-floor piping
2,000 feet of 3/4" tubing for supply-and-return piping to the manifolds

Fittings ProPEX® Fitting System