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How to Keep Your Cool Without Air-Conditioning

8 ways to beat the heat without cranking up the planet’s thermostat.

Lake jump, photo by Marco-Olivier Maheu

The torrid summer of 2010 will cap off the hottest decade ever recorded on our planet. American households have responded to the heat by doubling our consumption of electricity for air-conditioning since the mid-1990s. Our a/c use has, in turn, boosted greenhouse gas emissions from power plants—helping to speed global climate change and to ensure that future heat waves will be even more frequent and intense … and that we’ll soon be cranking up the air-conditioning yet another notch.

But around the country, people are starting to recognize this vicious cycle and trying to put a stop to it.

I’ve met many people from across the country who enjoy the non-air-conditioned life, even in the heart of the Sunbelt. Here in Salina, Kansas, a place where triple-digit highs are common, my wife Priti and I have lived without air-conditioning for ten years.

Air-conditioning plays an important role in protecting the more vulnerable segments of our population during heat waves. But that doesn’t warrant its lavish deployment throughout society for much of the year. Whether you live in a house on a shady lot or in a third-floor urban apartment, it’s possible to stay comfortable by reviving and updating simple hot-weather strategies that have been cast aside during the age of air-conditioning. And it can be done without costly equipment or home renovations.

The key is to focus on people-cooling, not building-cooling. Your body is constantly converting chemical energy from food into heat; hot and/or humid weather makes it harder to unload that heat. But filling a home with chilled, still, dry air around the clock is only one of the many ways by which we can help our bodies maintain their thermal balance.

Blue Number 1Keep air circulating. Air movement is highly effective in helping you evaporate perspiration and shed heat. On a merely warm day, a breeze through an open window is enough to do the job, but in truly hot weather, especially if it’s humid, turn on a fan. Ceiling fans are good, but the direct breeze from a portable or window fan can be more effective. In summer, we have a window fan blowing directly across our bed at night.

Using natural cooling can help reverse the trend toward isolation from neighbors and nature that has characterized the age of air-conditioning.

Don’t let the morning weather forecast scare you into reaching for the A/C switch. If all of the home’s occupants are away at work or school during the day, midday temperatures are not very relevant. If you are going to be home all day, the predicted high temperature or heat index may sound menacing; however, a naturally ventilated indoor space often remains at least ten degrees cooler than the outdoor maximum, and air movement knocks a few more degrees off the temperature your body is actually sensing. In a closed-up, air-conditioned home, a thermostat set in the mid-to-upper eighties would create a suffocating environment—but with open windows and moving air, living in such temperatures is no sweat.

Blue-Number-2.jpgChange your location with the time of day and sun position. If you’re fortunate enough to have a basement, take advantage of the geothermal cooling it provides. A fan enhances the effect. And if things get really tough, there’s no need to be an absolutist. For a few hours’ break, you can quickly and fairly efficiently cool down a one-room refuge with a window air-conditioner.

Blue-Number-3.jpgReserve sedentary activities for the hottest part of the day. When physical work is called for, just accept that you may need to wring out your shirt afterward. Don’t do your running or other exercise at three in the afternoon under a broiling sun, but don’t do it in an air-conditioned health club either. Research shows that regular exertion in the heat builds the body’s tolerance, helping you function better in hot weather.

Blue-Number-4.jpgDon’t make extra heat. Remember that any energy-consuming household device releases waste heat. Plan meals that involve less cooking—cut back on boiling and baking especially. Keep the dishwasher and any unneeded lights turned off. Use solar technology—a clothesline—to dry the laundry. And take cold or lukewarm showers to avoid burdening your indoor atmosphere with a big load of humidity.

Blue-Number-5.jpgGet wet. High humidity may be the enemy, but water in liquid form is an essential ally. When it’s feasible, hit the lake or local swimming pool with your friends and neighbors. When it’s not (and if water supplies are sufficient), nothing cools like the old garden hose or lawn sprinkler.

Blue-Number-6.jpgStay near plants. Head to the woods, where it always feels cooler. Plants can cool twice, by blocking sunlight and by absorbing heat as they transpire water. If you have a yard, you can further reduce the peak indoor temperature by creating more shade [pdf]. If possible, have trees, especially to the south and west. If that’s not possible, a dense stand of other kinds of tall plants—giant reed (Arundo donax) or sunflowers, for example—can be tall enough by July to shade the sun-baked sides of the house. We have grapevines covering a couple of windows.

Blue-Number-7.jpgBring in the night air. If, when the sun starts going down, the outdoor temperature drops below that in the house, it’s a signal to pull in some of that outdoor air. Use a whole-house or attic fan if you have one; otherwise, set up one window fan blowing in and another out.

Blue-Number-8.jpgMeet your neighbors. Especially in the evening, spend time under a shade tree, patio umbrella, or screen porch, or head for the neighborhood park. Using natural cooling can help reverse the trend toward isolation from neighbors and nature that has characterized the age of air-conditioning.

The most important adjustment to be made is not in the thermostat but in our own view of what constitutes comfort. When people say they couldn’t survive without air conditioning, they tend to be thinking about the last time they dashed from a sun-baked parking lot into a chilled home or business. But focusing on those extremes ignores a wide range of perfectly livable, pleasant environments—that come at a much lower cost to you and the planet.


Stan Cox author picStan Cox wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Stan is the author of Losing Our Cool: Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned World (and Finding New Ways to Get Through the Summer). His website is LosingOurCool.com.

Interested?

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Cox, S. (2010, August 12). How to Keep Your Cool Without Air-Conditioning. Retrieved February 12, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/how-to-keep-your-cool-without-air-conditioning. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Summer Hydration

Posted by Richard Schulte at Aug 13, 2010 12:11 PM
A good little old-timey concotion to drink in the shade (thanks to southern ingenuity):

Cool, filtered water
A splash of lemon juice
Slices of cucumber

This really helps the cool-down process. Something about the cucumbers is really relaxing. The sour from the lemon juice actually encourages slower, smaller sips, which will help you hydrate more effectively.

Ways to beat the heat shouldn't include invasive species.

Posted by Kevin Watson-Graff at Aug 13, 2010 03:09 PM
Please don't suggest that people plant Arundo Donax around their houses. It's an invasive weed that's already choking many areas of native habitat and helping to destroy wetlands.

Home Cooling

Posted by Kitty Hegemann at Aug 14, 2010 04:18 AM
All of the suggestions are great. I live in NE TN in the mountains. This summer has been very hot, and the heat has gone on for several months. Many afternoons we just take a nap. We do okay until after 3 pm. We use fans and pretty much close up the house by 11 am. Around 3 until after 6 pm, the house gets stifling. We don't have AC. Any suggestions for that 3 hour window would help. AND sleeping has become a problem. Our bedroom is upstairs and nights are at 70 or higher.

Home Cooling

Posted by Paul Burke at Aug 31, 2010 11:29 AM
We don't have AC either but we do use a solar fan for the attic. It consumes no electricity and removes the hot air from the attic spaces whenever the sun is out. It costs under $500 installed. At around 7 pm or whenever the outdoor temperature is lower than the indoor temperature, we use fan(s) to draw in the cooler air (for you that will mean drawing in air from an open downstairs window) and get rid of the hot air from the rooms most needing it (for you that will mean a separate fan blowing air out of the upstairs bedroom). Typically we will draw in air from the coolest area of the house (east or northeast or with prevailing wind) and exhaust air from the bedrooms. Unoccupied rooms are closed to get the most air moving in the important areas. July-Aug electric bill $85 in San Jose, CA

Home Cooling - Part 2

Posted by Kitty Hegemann at Aug 31, 2010 01:44 PM
We don't have an attic, but we do have skylights that crank open. That helps. The idea of the fans pushing air out upstairs and in downstairs from the east and north is a good one. We have a ceiling fan in our stairwell. I noticed, not long ago, that my husband had it blowing down. Oops! That's a good light bill. Ours in NE TN runs about the same. The local coop buys from TVA. Too bad it's now public/private. The price goes up and down like a yo-yo depending on the price of coal. They use nuclear, hydro, and coal. Hey, thanks for the suggestions.

the heat

Posted by DANE JOHNSON at Aug 14, 2010 05:04 AM
Today the temperature is forcast to be 110...in the shade in Phoenix.
A good technique to beat the heat is to wear a damp shirt--damp like is just came out of the wash machine. That gets me through the toughest part of the day when I work outside. This technique may work in other settings as well. If a fan is blowing on you, it's positively chilly.

How to keep your cool without a/c

Posted by rich at Aug 21, 2010 08:18 PM
Look up "green roofs" on Google. http://www.greenroofplants.com/ . You can use deciduous trees to provide the house with shade in the summer and sunlight during winter. Some deciduous trees can also produce fruit.

And Keep The Cool Air In!

Posted by Thomas Harrison at Sep 06, 2010 06:07 PM
I too have an AC-free home (nobody thinks it's hot in Boston, but it's regularly in the 90's and humid). A key step forward for our battle against the heat and the cold was to do a proper job of air sealing -- making the house envelope continuous so that the good stuff (cool air in summer, hot in winter) doesn't leak out.

We do a "lock down" on days expected to be warm -- shut the windows, close the blinds (inside and out) in the morning. A tight (and yes, well insulated) house will stay cool for quite a long time.

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