The Home Envelope | Insulation, Air Sealing and More

Nealon Insulation

The Home Envelope is your go-to podcast for making Connecticut homes more energy-efficient, comfortable, and quiet. Brought to you by Nealon Insulation, we cover attic upgrades, air sealing, wall insulation, and more—minus the jargon. Whether you're a homeowner or contractor, tune in for practical tips, expert advice, and real stories from across the CT shoreline.

  1. May 5

    Beneath Your Feet: The Ultimate Guide to Crawl Space Insulation and Encapsulation

    That dark, musty area beneath your floorboards is easy to ignore, but what if it was secretly costing you money, affecting your home's air quality, and making your living spaces uncomfortable? In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the most neglected part of your home: the crawl space.We dive deep into the fundamental shift in building science—from the traditional "vented" approach to modern "encapsulation". Learn why up to 60% of the air you breathe indoors originates in your crawl space due to the "stack effect," and why failing to manage moisture below can lead to mold, wood rot, and structural damage.In this episode, we discuss: The Vented vs. Unvented Debate: Why traditional vents often do more harm than good by inviting humid summer air into your foundation.The Insulation Material Showdown: We break down the pros and cons of common materials.What is Encapsulation? We walk through the process of "shrink-wrapping" your crawl space with heavy-duty vapor barriers, sealing vents, and adding active humidity control with dehumidifiers.Energy Savings and Home Value: Discover how proper crawl space management can save you an average of 15–20% on heating and cooling costs and increase your property value by up to 10%.Critical Safety and Code Checks: From termite inspection gaps to fire-rating requirements and radon mitigation, we cover what you need to know to ensure your project is up to code.Whether you’re dealing with cold floors in the winter or a persistent musty smell in the summer, this episode provides the technical analysis and expert tips needed to turn your "damp dungeon" into a clean, controlled part of your home

    23 min
  2. Apr 22

    Garage Insulation 101: Materials, Moisture, and What Actually Works

    Garages are the most misunderstood space in your home. They’re not quite inside, not quite outside—and if you get the insulation wrong, you feel it everywhere else. In this episode, we break down garage insulation from the ground up—without the fluff. We start with what building codes actually require (and why attached garages are treated differently), then dig into the real-world consequences: cold floors above, condensation dripping off doors, and energy bills creeping higher than they should. From there, we get practical. You’ll hear a clear comparison of insulation materials—spray foam, fiberglass, cellulose, and mineral wool—so you can match the right system to your garage, whether it’s heated, attached, or just storing tools and cars. We also cover hybrid approaches like “flash and batt,” and when they make sense. Moisture control gets special attention, because that’s where most garages fail. We walk through simple, proven fixes—from ventilation and vapor barriers to low-cost hacks that stop winter condensation in its tracks. Finally, we zoom out and talk ROI: how insulating your garage creates a thermal buffer, reduces HVAC strain, and improves comfort in the rooms you actually live in. If you’ve ever wondered why the room above your garage is freezing—or whether insulating your garage is worth it—this episode gives you the answers, grounded in building science and field-tested experience.

    23 min
  3. Apr 3

    Beyond the Studs: Continuous Wall Insulation & Thermal Bridging

    This podcast is your comprehensive field guide to navigating the complex world of residential energy efficiency and the 2022 Connecticut State Building Code. Hosted by industry experts, the show breaks down the technical science of insulation into actionable advice for homeowners and contractors alike. Listeners will explore the latest code requirements for Climate Zone 5A, including the shift toward continuous insulation to eliminate thermal bridging and the mandatory R-60 standards for attics. We dive deep into the pros and cons of various materials—from the "triple-espresso" performance of closed-cell spray foam to the eco-friendly, sound-dampening benefits of dense-pack cellulose. Key topics include: The "Drill-and-Fill" Method: Learn how to insulate existing exterior walls without the mess of removing drywall or siding.Safety and Remediation: Understand the critical risks of asbestos-contaminated vermiculite and why DIY insulation removal can often turn into a "snow globe" of health hazards.Historic Home Preservation: Discover how to insulate a 200-year-old home without causing moisture-driven structural rot or "spalling" brick.Maximizing ROI: We guide you through applying for Energize CT rebates, which can cover up to $2.00 per square foot for insulation, and explain how proper air sealing can slash energy bills by 15% to 30%. Whether you are battling drafty rooms, high utility bills, or preparing for a major renovation, this podcast provides the "straight talk" needed to make your home warmer in the winter, cooler in the summer, and quieter year-round. Learn from the experts at Nealon Insulation.

    10 min
  4. Mar 2

    The Mouse Hotel Problem: Insulation, Airflow, and the Real Cost of Rodents

    Mice don’t randomly “find” your house. They follow physics. In this episode, The Mouse Hotel Problem: Insulation, Airflow, and the Real Cost of Rodents, we unpack the overlooked connection between building science and pest intrusion. Warm air rises. Negative pressure pulls. The stack effect turns tiny air leaks into scent highways that guide rodents straight to your rim joists, attic top plates, and basement penetrations. From there, we go deeper. You’ll learn why a 1/4-inch gap is effectively an open door for a house mouse, how rats can jump 36 inches and survive a 50-foot drop, and why fiberglass insulation often becomes what contractors bluntly call a “mouse hotel.” We compare insulation systems—fiberglass, borate-treated cellulose, spray foam, and mineral wool—through the lens of air sealing, gnaw resistance, and long-term performance. But this isn’t just about biology or thermodynamics. It’s about economics. We break down the real cost of infestation: lost R-value, increased heating bills, remediation expenses that can exceed $5,000, and the uncomfortable truth that most rodent damage isn’t covered by standard homeowner’s insurance. With more than one in seven Connecticut homes reporting rodent activity in a recent year, this isn’t theoretical—it’s structural. Finally, we explore layered exclusion strategies that work: sheet metal, hardware cloth, Xcluder fabric, proper air sealing, and why pest control without building science is often just a temporary fix. If you care about energy efficiency, indoor air quality, building durability—or simply not sharing your attic with wildlife—this episode connects the dots between airflow, insulation, and the biology of intrusion. Because once you understand the stack effect, you stop fighting mice.You start redesigning the building.

    15 min
  5. 12/19/2025

    Insulating Connecticut’s Historic Homes: What Works, What Fails, and Why

    Insulating a historic home is not a matter of doing “more” — it is a matter of doing it right. In this episode, we trace the evolution of insulation in Connecticut homes over the last century, from eelgrass and sawdust to modern R-values and airtight construction. Along the way, we explain why older houses behave differently than new builds, and why applying modern insulation methods without understanding historic building physics can lead to moisture damage, rot, and costly failures. You’ll learn how early Connecticut homes were designed to “breathe,” why sealing them like a modern house can backfire, and how professionals balance energy efficiency with preservation. We break down the role of air sealing, blower door testing, and material selection — including where cellulose and mineral wool shine, and why spray foam can be risky in historic structures. This episode also lays out a practical retrofit playbook: how to diagnose an old house before insulating, the correct sequence of upgrades, and when wall insulation should — or should not — be part of the plan. Whether you own a historic home, work in preservation, or simply want to understand why old houses require a different approach, this episode explains what works, what fails, and why getting it wrong can do more harm than good. #HistoricHomes #HistoricHomeInsulation #OldHouseCare #OldHouseRenovation #PreservationMatters #BuildingScience #EnergyEfficiency #HomePerformance #InsulationEducation #AirSealing #CelluloseInsulation #MineralWool #MoistureMatters #ConnecticutHomes #NewEnglandHomes #HomeImprovementPodcast #ConstructionPodcast

    12 min

About

The Home Envelope is your go-to podcast for making Connecticut homes more energy-efficient, comfortable, and quiet. Brought to you by Nealon Insulation, we cover attic upgrades, air sealing, wall insulation, and more—minus the jargon. Whether you're a homeowner or contractor, tune in for practical tips, expert advice, and real stories from across the CT shoreline.