Building A Greenhouse At Home – What To Know!

I have recently created an online e-course to give you some helpful tips when embarking on the journey of building a greenhouse. The five day course covers off on the following topics. The course is delivered via email right to your inbox.

Overview.

1. Part 1 – How Does A Greenhouse Capture Heat?
2. Part 2 – Types Of Greenhouses
3. Part 3 – Tools And Materials For Your Greenhouse
4. Part 4 – Greenhouse Tables, Shelving And Plant Holders
5. Part 5 – Tips For Greenhouse Plans

Let’s go ahead & get started today with “Part 1 – How Does A Greenhouse Capture Heat?”.

Part 1 – How Does A Greenhouse Capture Heat?
============================
A greenhouse uses a special kind of glass that acts as a medium which selectively transmits spectral frequencies. Spectral comes from the word spectrum.

In layman’s terms, a spectral frequency can be defined in terms of the following principle: any object in the universe emits, radiates or transmits light. The distribution of this light along an electromagnetic spectrum is determined by the object’s composition.

Therefore, the glass of a greenhouse traps energy within the greenhouse and the heat in turn provides heat for the plants and the ground inside the greenhouse. It warms the air near the ground, preventing it from rising and leaving the confines of the structure.

For example, if you open a small window near the roof of a greenhouse, the temperature drops significantly. This is because of the autovent automatic cooling system. An autovent is simply a device used by greenhouses that maintains a range of temperatures inside. This is how greenhouses trap electromagnetic radiation and prevents convection (transference of heat by currents within a fluid).

Curious about how the idea of a greenhouse came about? It goes back to the days of the Romans, who – as history annals show – were the first people to create a structure to protect plants. Using heated pits, they put up slabs of rock to form primitive greenhouses. The term glasshouse which is the correct name of this structure, was adopted sometime in the 17th and 18th centuries.

At that time, however, the error was in believing that heat was more important than light for plants to thrive. Structures were being built to exclude the entry of light, but by the time the glass tax of 1845 was abolished, the design of greenhouses started to change.

Builders realized then that a curved roof instead of a flat one allowed higher concentrations of the sun’s rays, and that by using iron instead of wood, the greenhouse could be structurally reinforced and made capable of absorbing more light.

Next time we’ll be discussing a little about “Types Of Greenhouses”.

For more information about this part of How Does A Greenhouse Capture Heat, please refer to the guide to titled Building a Greenhouse at my Blog.

Find out important advice in the sphere of suspended ceiling – go through the publication. The times have come when concise info is truly within one click, use this possibility.

Filed under Gardening by .