Attic Knee Wall Ventilation
I read lots of guides and blogs understanding that roof deck sheathing needs to be ventilated from soffits at bottom edge of roof preferable to ridge or gable end vents.
Attic knee wall ventilation. Ventilating knee wall attics is challenging. Sometimes though there are no soffits. The upstairs bedrooms are built inside the roof with a peak attic above the bedroom ceiling and knee wall attic spaces behind the bedroom walls. Filling the space behind the knee walls with insulation helps to lock in your home s thermal energy.
Install a top and bottom plate or blocking at the top and bottom of all knee wall cavities. If these are absent they can sometimes be added by sliding them in place above the batts especially if the sloped section of roof is relatively short. Intake vents located at the lowest part of the roof under the eaves allow cool. The peak attic is insulated above the bedroom ceiling and has gable end vents at each end.
What happens then is that the batts don t make contact with the air barrier the drywall air moves through and around them and they fall out of the attic kneewall. Most builders install fiberglass batts between the studs and some type of blown insulation between the floor joists. The problem with many kneewalls is that they have fiberglass batt insulation with nothing covering them on the attic side as shown in the photo below. Although kneewalls can help turn attics into living space they often present insulation challenges.
In an ideal world we install soffit vents as intakes make sure the slopes can breathe with ventilation baffles and exhaust through a ridge vent. Attic ventilation works on the principle that heated air naturally rises primarily utilizing two types of vents. Old school roof vents which look like rectangles on the roof work pretty well too. Rather than leaving this space empty homeowners can fill it with insulation for additional thermal protection.
If you can gain access to the triangular attic behind the kneewall it s often possible to inspect the rafter bays to see if the builder included ventilation baffles. With that said it s important to allow outdoor air to enter the attic.