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Build Podcast

Why Building to Code Isn’t Enough β€” The Build HD Standard Explained

πŸ“… June 14, 2026 ⏱️ 36:36 🎀 Matt Risinger, Jim Gunn

Chapters

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  • 0:00
    Intro & the Build HD standard
  • 1:09
    Build Show Live & Pella sponsor
  • 3:55
    How the HD standard came together
  • 6:43
    Code as a starting point, not the goal
  • 11:06
    Design: central mechanical room
  • 13:17
    HVAC in the garage & condensation
  • 15:58
    Communicating the standard on site
  • 17:35
    Monopoly framing explained
  • 20:17
    Air control & blower-door scores
  • 24:03
    Same house quality regardless of budget
  • 26:44
    Smaller and better = affordable quality
  • 31:38
    The 'bigger, more' trap
  • 33:16
    Insulated garage & HVAC tie-in
  • 35:26
    Wrap-up & meet Jim invite

Speakers

M
Matt Risinger
Host
J
Jim Gunn
Architect/Builder, Southpass Design

Key Takeaways

✦

Code is only a floor, not a goal β€” Matt and Jim frame the Build HD standard as bolting a deeper layer of durability and performance onto code rather than rejecting it.

✦

Building code focuses on life-safety and minimums; it never checks the water-management and air-sealing details (missing head flashings, blower-door numbers) that actually determine whether a house lasts.

✦

The Build HD standard was 'galvanized' after a conversation at last year's Dallas show, turning loose durability ideas into a structured, teachable spec that layers onto code.

✦

Mechanical placement is a design decision: starting the floor plan from a central mechanical room (short duct and hot-water runs) beats the common mistake of jamming HVAC in a hot garage and then fighting mold and humidity.

✦

'Monopoly framing' β€” treating the structure as one clean, taped, penetration-free monolithic shell before anything is added β€” is the backbone of the wall/roof assembly and the air-control strategy.

✦

Blower-door and air-sealing performance must be built in from the start; there is almost nothing you can do to fix a failing air barrier after drywall goes up.

✦

Smaller and better beats bigger β€” designing efficient, right-sized spaces (avoiding 'giant dumb spaces') lets clients afford higher quality per square foot instead of a large, leaky, drafty house.

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