Why Every Custom Builder Needs a Building Science Consultant | Build Show Podcast Ep. 222
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Builders wrongly assume a building science firm only shows up for failures β James explains that RDH's real value is getting involved early to prevent failures, not just diagnose them.
Environmental separation is the core discipline: the building enclosure is a system, and a consultant coordinates structure, vapor strategy, and thermal performance so the parts you're trying to separate never get wet.
The riskiest modern designs β flat roofs, no overhangs, and expansive glass β are exactly the ones that most need enclosure modeling to avoid condensation and water problems.
Consultants use thermal and dew-point modeling to check, climate by climate, whether a wall will hit a condensing surface at any point in the year, then design a vapor strategy around it.
Good early details let the trades do the mock-up once and repeat it correctly, saving construction cost that offsets the consultant's fee β the same logic as hiring a mechanical engineer for HVAC design.
What works in one climate can fail in another; RDH's cross-market experience (Boston, Toronto, New York) shows assemblies must be tuned to local conditions, not copy-pasted.
For fire resilience in wildland-urban-interface zones, windows are the weak link β tempered/aluminum or steel-frame windows and sealing the roof-to-soffit and venting details are key to hardening a house against embers.
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