IAQ developments accelerated by COVID-19
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
We spend over 80% of our time indoors (and perhaps a little more during lockdowns introduced due to the pandemic). There is increasing pressure on employers to address the issue of providing good indoor air quality (IAQ) in the workplace in order to get staff back to work safely.
According to the EPA (United States Environmental Protection Agency), indoor air quality refers to the air quality within and around buildings and structures, especially as it relates to the health and comfort of building occupants. Understanding and controlling common pollutants indoors can help reduce the risk of indoor health concerns.
[edit] HVAC and COVID-19
In recent years, IAQ has gained increased attention from HVAC specifiers in the commercial space. Designers, especially in Europe and in the U.S., have striven to specify fully featured ventilation solutions to keep pace with the evolution of regulatory compliance and the increasing sophistication of end user requirements.
To enhance comfort levels and ensure the health and safety of the built environment occupants, ventilation systems have become elaborate and progressively more customised. In fact, there is no one-size-fits-all solution for IAQ, which remains a vague concept until it is applied to the relevant building site and vertical market.
The health crisis triggered by the pandemic has brought the debate on IAQ from closed HVAC industry circles to the broader attention of the mainstream media. The claim that a badly designed ventilation system in a public space could facilitate the viral contagion amongst the occupiers has caused anxiety within the general public and sparked a renewed interest in IAQ facility upgrades engaging building owners as well as operators.
The urgency of enhancing the IAQ solutions prompted by the health risk associated with the COVID-19 spread represents a challenge for regulators and specifiers, a cost for building owners and an opportunity for product development for HVAC manufacturers.
[edit] Building services and the return to work
Businesses are planning how to bring staff back safely into workplace, looking for ways to do it efficiently and cost effectively. The occupancy levels of buildings vary greatly across major economies and cities.
Cushman & Wakefield, a commercial real estate services firm, reported that the “office real estate market will get back to pre-COVID level in 2025”. The study also reports that “work from home will double, and hybrid working will increase. The share of people working permanently from home in the U.S. and Europe will increase from roughly 5-6% pre-COVID-19 to between 10% and 11% post-COVID, while the share of hybrid working, also referred to as agile working, will increase from between 32% to 36% to just under half of all workers”.
Building services engineers will increasingly face the new challenge of how to bring existing buildings with reduced occupancy levels to an acceptable standard for the safe return of employees. Some of the strategies under consideration include redesigning lay-outs, zonal HVAC controls, dilution ventilation, VRF with DOAS (100% fresh air), cleaning of air ducts, filtration, ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI), smart sensors and smart controls and so on. Utilisation of some of these strategies will depend on cost, time and knowledge from building owners, service and maintenance contractors and building services engineers.
[edit] COVID-19 impact on the HVAC industry
The BSRIA (Building Services Research & Information Association) COVID-19 Air Conditioning market update study captured the growing trend towards the use of VRF with DOAS and an increase in the number of air handling units sold with DX coils.
The 2020 global COVID-19 pandemic has catalysed attention and awareness of the importance of hazard free indoor air in the commercial space. In the near future, regulatory requirements and building end user requests will make IAQ an essential aspect of specification. Developers may nurture an interest in enhancing their building environmental wellness, as this would contribute to an increased value of their assets.
The consequences of this transformation on the HVAC industry are still hazy. Ventilation and air conditioning companies are developing new solutions and working in partnership with control suppliers, specifiers and regulators specially to resolve the apparent incongruity between efficiency and IAQ.
The process is in its infancy and is confined to the geographical context of the developed countries. Nevertheless, it is clear the trend will continue even when the COVID-19 emergency is finally tamed. This trend will refocus the attention of the specifiers of commercial buildings, widening their concept of sustainability in construction from a restricted reference to efficiency confined to cost and carbon emission containment to a wider target which includes health, wellness and employee productivity.
This article originally appeared on the BSRIA website under the title, 'Indoor Air Quality developments accelerated by Covid-19 pandemic'. It was published in October 2020.
--BSRIA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
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- Amber warnings raise building overheating concern.
- BSRIA articles on Designing Buildings Wiki.
- Building ventilation and COVID-19 transmission risk.
- Commissioning building systems.
- Coronavirus and the construction industry.
- COVID-19 and the US HVAC sector.
- Designing HVAC to resist harmful pathogenic microorganisms (bacteria and viruses such as influenza and 2019-nCov)
- Global growth in 2020 air-conditioning market.
- Growing focus on IAQ challenges for specifiers and HVAC manufacturers.
- Health performance indicators in the built environment.
- Heating ventilation and air conditioning HVAC.
- HVAC industry defines post COVID-19 changes.
- IMMUNE Building Standard.
- Indoor air quality.
- Let us evolve our buildings from being passive structures to interactive and reactive systems.
- Mechanical ventilation's role in improving indoor air quality.
- MedicAir air purification technology.
- SAGE EMG guidance on ventilation and COVID-19.
- School reopening and indoor air quality in North America.
- Standalone: The new way forward in non-domestic ventilation.
- Ventilation and control of COVID-19 transmission.
- When hospital buildings aren’t healthy.
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