Jay Angler wrote:It's a balance between having an efficient home from the heating/cooling perspective, and having a home that "breathes" a little. North American society tends to fill homes with materials that off-gas toxins, and if you want to run a bathroom/kitchen fan, you need a place for air to enter. In the past, leaky doors and windows were those places. Now, everyone is trying to seal those leaks, but unless some sort of air exchanger is installed, air quality can suffer.
I agree that if you're going to build your house in a path-of-least-resistance way using the same conventional poisonous materials used by e.g. big development companies, probably some leakiness is a blessing in disguise.
But as a general principle, I disagree about designing leakiness into a house; that
should be avoided. Instead, design the house so the exchange of conditioned and fresh air can be maximally controlled by the HVAC system (which I would say includes e.g. bathroom and kitchen fans), and then try to avoid inclusion of materials that offgas toxins. Toward that efficiency goal, improving the seal of exterior doors is a good thing.
Chamfered edges, big squishy seals, and rounded corners too, could be easy-win ways to improve conventional door/jamb design. Same goes for windows .