Hi there, time to share ways to keep your home cool during hot times
So ok, usual ways I use:
- open everything during night
- close everything during day
- external sheets on windows without shutters
- some curtains to prevent heat from going upstairs
I was also wondering if plants could also help inside, any ideas ?
Share your advices !
Most importantly: Make sure no direct sunlight enters the house. Insulate your roof. Plants in the house can have a modest cooling effect. Close doors to rooms that get hot faster. Lower floors (especially cellars) are cooler, with a small ventilator this cooler air can be transported upwards. At night, use small ventilators to “pump” cool night air through all the floors.
Only fans.
ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ
Wet curtains, and if that’s not enough a wet towel on the head (not your home, I know, but something to remember when your brain threatens to overheat and you’ve got no energy left to pursue another solution.
As someone from the equator with hot and humid air, this thing is common, it allow hot air in the attic to escape so the hot attic won’t radiate into your house, while sucking fresh air into your house. Plant surrounding your home exterior also will help with the cooling as well, especially when it stop light from hitting your wall. I usually just open everything during day, but open everything during night will also help circulate the hot air heated by the heat-trapping concrete wall. As of now i can’t open during night because my cat will escape, so i just use ac for half hour or so.
as someone from a similar place, mosquitoes make opening windows at night a health hazard, unless you install netting.
I should be getting to do that…
Yeah the mozzy mesh is a life saver, for both mosquitoes and flying termite/ant swarm after rain, but do keep in mind that meshes will restrict some air flow. Still, it’s better than nothing, and combine with that rooftop onion you might get better result.
I never knew what that rooftop onion does. But now that I know, that’s another thing to fix.
When its hot, avoid cooking indoors if you can. Especially iff you dont have proper exhaust in your kitchen. Buy some food that require less heat or none. Sandwiches, Fruits, Salads, etc.
Keep your home cool and yourself too.
Pretty good (but long) answer with historic solutions here : https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/2025/06/dressing-and-undressing-the-home/
My short answer : do not let the sunshine in (stores, awnings, shutters), let it flow let it go (air), I like big walls and I cannot lie
@salcie
On m’a parlé des films solaires adhésifs anti chaleur pour les vitres. Mais, je ne pourrais pas conseiller de marque.Sinon conseils habituels :
- Aérer la nuit.
- Fermer les volets en journée.
- Utiliser un ventilateur
- Bien s’hydrater
- Serviettes humides.Froidotte :
Je mets des packs de glace au congélateur et je les utilise enveloppés dans une serviette.Look at old hot climates.
notice the afternoon siesta. Sleep in the shade in the hot of the day and work (play) later into the night.
notice large covered porches around the house. Spend more time outside in the breeze and shade.
notice the large windows and doors. When you are inside get plenty of ventilation-
notice the ceiling fan (often slave pulled). Be glad we now have electric fans.
notice the folding hand fans. Portable fans exist, though most of the time the hand fan is better - get one.
People in hot climates do not sit outside. They also do not open their windows. Because they’re not insane.
In hot and dry climates, a breeze in a shady place works well, actually. In humid places it’s harder.
That actually has results counterintuitive to temperate people when it comes to clothing. Arabs don’t just cover up for modesty.
Apparently window awnings make a considerable difference.
If your roof is not shaded by trees, a light colored roof makes a huge difference. This can be accomplished a number of ways. Replacing your roofing material with a lighter color is ideal but expensive. Coating it with something like Henry Tropi-cool is durable but the product is also a little pricey. The absolute budget way to do this on an asphalt shingled roof is with a slurry of masonry lime. I’ve experimented with all of these methods and the results are dramatic. In my case the coating paid for itself within one season and made the house noticeably more comfortable.
If you live in a humid area, AC will become more and more valuable. Wet bulb temperature. At some point your sweat will no longer evaporate and you’ll die. Climate change cometh.
Surprised this hasn’t been mentioned yet, but awnings. Glass is a superb thermal conductor. Not even the best curtain in the world would prevent air getting hot through the window if the sun is hitting it directly. An awning is meant to shade the window glass, preventing heating way more than a curtain alone.
Also, if the home has several levels, open the upper floor windows more than the lower ones. Hot air expands and raises. If it has somewhere to escape it will keep the house cool and the windows will draw in wind. Wind moves faster at higher altitudes. That’s why attic fans are so effective.
Didn’t say if you own the home or not, but if so:
Mind it’s only hot for 2-4 months out of the year for me, so I have a winterized attic fan. Just means I’m not losing heat in the winter and paid a little more to buy it. You can just get a regular attic fan if it’s never or rarely cold where you live.
You leave windows open, but now there’s negative pressure from pushing air out the attic where a lot of the heat is trapped and sucking in air from outside even if there’s no breeze. I leave the attic access hole open when it’s running. The rare day I still use a Window A/C to sleep.
Air flow was key. Tried to get a good cross breeze from one end of the house to the other (unless the breeze is also hot). At night, we’d use a box fan in the window or door to get all the hot air out. If you can block your exterior walls/windows from getting direct sunlight, that should help. Curtains work (or you could also just place objects or plants in front to block the sunlight). Alternatively, you could install one of those large roll up sun shades for a more permanent solution. Did that for a few windows that get a lot of sun and made a big difference.
From personal experience, the following made a difference (but some will have a lot higher cost):
- Replacing the insulation in the roof/attic. You could also add radiant barriers, but insulation is probably a better bang for your buck.
- Insulating the exterior walls (drill and fill). Our walls used to be hot to the touch in the summer before this.
- Double pane windows
- Seal any air gaps or holes. Expanding foam is pretty good at this.
From what others have told me:
- Installing a whole house attic fan to evacuate hot air at the end of the day. My neighbor did this and swears by it.
- Painting your house a lighter color. Can’t say how effective but makes sense intuitively.
Stuff that only sort of worked:
- Swamp coolers. Works ok in a pinch, but your house will feel humid like the tropics. Would personally skip.
- Portable AC. The exhaust hose gets hot so it’s not as efficient as an external AC or window unit. But it could help if you’re directly in front of the cold air vent.
Using a reflective surface such as aluminum foil on the windows (shiny facing outside) will help. I’ve used contact spray adhesive on cardboard cut to size of window before. You can also get the bubble-wrap aluminum insulation.
Cut temps in my old studio from food-safe poultry temp to near ambient on the 100+F/40+C days.