Keep your toes toasty with radiant heating in floors

Published: Sunday, Nov. 8, 2009 6:47 p.m. MST
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There are few things worse in the winter than stepping on a cold tile floor.

A heated floor is one of those luxuries that is becoming more common with the push for energy efficiency and better indoor air quality.

Radiant heating is a more efficient option compared to electric baseboard or forced-air gas heating. The lack of moving air also lowers dust levels in the house, which is good for people with allergies or anyone who loathes dusting.

Radiant heating systems involve supplying heat directly to the floor or to panels in the wall or ceiling of a house. The systems depend largely on radiant heat transfer. Radiant heating is when you can feel the warmth of a hot stovetop element from across the room. When radiant heating is located in the floor, it is often called radiant floor heating or simply floor heating.

There are three types of radiant floor heat: radiant air floors (air is the heat-carrying medium); electric radiant floors; and hot water (hydronic) radiant floors.

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All three can be subdivided by the type of installation: Those that make use of the large thermal mass of a concrete slab floor or lightweight concrete over a wooden subfloor (these are called "wet installations"), and those in which the installer "sandwiches" the radiant floor tubing between two layers of plywood or attaches the tubing under the finished floor or subfloor ("dry installations").

Air-heated radiant floors: You don't see air-heated radiant floors in homes very often because air cannot hold large amounts of heat. Sometimes these are combined with solar air heating systems, but in cold climates they lose energy efficiency because they need a conventional furnace to pump warm air through the floors at night.

Electric radiant floors: Electric radiant floors typically consist of electric cables built into the floor. Systems that feature mats of electrically conductive plastic are also available, and they are mounted onto the subfloor below a floor covering, such as tile.

Because of the relatively high cost of electricity, electric radiant floors are usually only cost-effective if they include a significant thermal mass, such as a thick concrete floor, and your electric utility company offers time-of-use rates. Time-of-use rates allow you to "charge" the concrete floor with heat during off-peak hours (approximately 9 p.m.-6 a.m.). If the floor's thermal mass is large enough, the heat stored in it will keep the house comfortable for eight to 10 hours. This works best when daytime temperatures are significantly warmer than nighttime temperatures.

Recent comments

Yes, warm floors are the way to go! I incorporated an electric...

Alan Deter | Nov. 18, 2009 at 9:02 a.m.

I agree, warm floors are awesome! The hydronic floor system in my...

Gregg Forster | Nov. 9, 2009 at 7:48 a.m.

Image
Annie V. Schwemmer

This concrete floor is prepped for hydronic radiant tubing with an insulation sheet to reflect heat up into the room.

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