Subject: Environment in historic house
Christine Cross <ccross1 [at] execpc__com> writes >I am currently working on the restoration of a 1930s home in >Wisconsin, USA. We have recently upgraded the existing HVAC system. >My question concerns RH levels. I had always been told that optimum >RH in a historic house was 50% with a temperature between 65 and 70 >degrees Fahrenheit year round. The project architect feels this RH is >too high and will infiltrate the plaster and begin to rot the wall >studs. What should we do? Any suggestions for sources concerning >this topic? I agree with your project architect. First of all, 50% RH is kind of a false promise. The 50% RH number has crept into the conservation vernacular as if something magical happens if any object is kept at that RH year-round. The fact is, your RH value should be driven by the needs of the materials in your collection and the realities that the collection faces. All other things being equal, 50% RH is maybe a bit too high for 20th century paper and reactive metals like silver, but too low for materials like ivory, bone and some inlaid furniture. So, even in many museum showcase exhibits (where the RH value can be set and maintained pretty readily) the 50% RH number is often a compromise on what's ideal for most materials. Depending on the type of collection in your house, I doubt any damage would occur if you allowed your winter-time RH to drift as low as 30% RH for the duration of the heating season. Even at that low level of humidification, it would be advisable to shut your humidifier off entirely on the coldest days of the year (does it get below zero there?--ever?) to prevent condensation. Any part of the collection that might require a higher RH could probably be enclosed in a micro-climate to see it through the heating season. It is often the case with historic houses, that the largest and most significant object in the collection is the house itself. Delivering enough humidification to maintain 50% RH at 65 to 70 degrees F--in Wisconsin--for the duration of the heating season--would likely have disastrous results for an older building. (In cold climates, it isn't even very easy to provide such conditions for newly constructed buildings that are meticulously insulated, double-glazed and well-sealed!) Air at that temperature and RH has a fairly high dewpoint--if the ambient temperature is around 65 to 70 degrees and the RH is 50%, then you will achieve condensation on just about every surface that is below 48 degrees F in temperature! This means that your windows will fog up throughout the house, but you will also get condensation in uninsulated wall cavities and this can cause protracted physical damage that you will not be able to detect until it is far too late. Don't sacrifice an important structure for the sake of sustaining a humidity level that won't really be of great benefit to any one part of the collection. You will succeed in doing little good and could cause a lot of harm. Marion Mecklenberg gave a great report on this topic at AIC this year (noting how hygroscopic materials behave differently in reality than they do under test conditions, due to the magnitude of RH cycling and the hysteresis of the material). You may also want to peruse the resources at the Building Research Institute and the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. Feel free to contact me off-list for specific links and more information. Craig Oleszewski Hygrospec Rhinebeck, NY. 845-876-3311 *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:36 Distributed: Wednesday, January 3, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-36-003 ***Received on Saturday, 23 December, 2000