The energy efficiency benefits of woven mesh screens on louvres. “Can your louvre windows be screened?” is one of the most common questions we are asked. Altair Louvre Windows sure can be screened!
They can be screened with fibreglass mesh to keep the insects out, or woven metal mesh to keep intruders out.
Most people don’t realise though that mesh screens offer more benefits than protection from insects and intruders. Specifically they offer some great energy efficiency benefits in the form of shading and thermal insulation.
Shading like shade cloth
Few people realise it, but it’s obvious when you think about it: Mesh screens give similar benefits to shade cloth!
- They’re both woven.
- They both provide shade (varying amounts depending on the tightness of the weave).
- You can see through both (again to varying degrees depending on the weave).
In a similar way to shade cloth, woven mesh screens help to keep buildings cooler by reducing the amount of hot sunlight that passes through them and into the building.
Insulation like double glazing
Interestingly, due to the distance between the closed blades of an Altair Louvre Window and a woven mesh screen (a little over 105mm), mesh screens give similar benefits to double glazing!
- They both trap a layer of air between two vertical surfaces.
- The layer of air acts as a thermal buffer and so reduces the heat flow between the two vertical surfaces.
When outside temperatures are much higher or lower than comfortable temperatures, this insulation is very beneficial in keeping warmth in, or keeping heat out to improve the efficiency of heating and cooling systems.
Should all windows be screened?
Not necessarily… in some situations it is very beneficial to maximise the amount of direct sunlight that passes through a window. Think about the warmth generated by sunlight streaming through a window on a cold day. Smart designers will intentionally allow sunlight to stream in through north-facing windows during the colder season when the sun is low in the sky, but will design eaves, overhangs or other shading structures to shade those same windows during the warmer season when the sun is higher in the sky. For this reason, screening north-facing windows may reduce this winter benefit but energy efficient building design is a fairly complex topic with many interacting aspects of a building’s design contributing to the overall energy efficiency so we’d always recommend that this is discussed with your architect, building designer or energy efficiency consultant or assessor.