As described in A Builder’s Guide to Breathable Indoor Air, current building codes require ventilation rates based on energy and comfort concerns, rather than as a basis for creating a healthy indoor environment. Our recommendations for health-based ventilation rates (see table below) are based on having designed thousands of systems using high performance ERV’s, and on personally living in a 5-bedroom home with a high-performance ERV for 6 years.
Our recommendations also take into account data from 80,000 Hayward Scores demonstrating acceleration of self-reported health symptoms in smaller homes with high occupancy. The Hayward Score tracks 23 medical symptoms associated with homes, and it is currently the largest study on health and housing ever created.
The comparison of ventilation rates in the chart above underscore the fact that health-based ventilation rates must be based on occupancy number, rather than house size. This is especially evident in smaller homes, suggesting that, while likely unintended, current ventilation standards discriminate against smaller, typically lower income, residences.
Ventilation air must dissipate or remove human microbial shedding, which includes skin cells, to maintain a healthy indoor environment. The latest research from Indoor Chem demonstrates a high impact of human skin cell shedding with occupancy higher than two.
We welcome comments, data and information about other studies to enlighten our recommendations. Please send to: FreshAir@zondahome.com
Return to main article.