HOW TO ENSURE VENTILATION IN YOUR HOME ? A360 Architects

Proper ventilation is essential for any home. It helps improve air circulation, keeps humidity in check and prevents the spread of fungus. It keeps the house odour-free and the occupants of the house in good health. Here is how to set up a good ventilation infrastructure for your home.

1. Find an engineer to design a good ventilation system for your home.

2. Install your windows in a location that improves airflow.

3. Install kitchen chimneys and exhaust fans (you can also use exhaust fans for the bathroom)

How To Ensure Ventilation In Your Home?

Here are some ways you can improve ventilation in your home. Using as many options as possible (opening windows, using air filters, and turning on fans) will eliminate virus particles in your home more quickly. You can reduce particles even further by continuing to ventilate after a visitor has left (for example, an hour longer).

Ventilation: moves air into, out of, or within a space.

Filtering: Traps particles in a filter to remove them from the air.

How To Improve Ventilation In Your Home?

Bring as much fresh air into your home as possible

Bringing fresh outdoor air into your home can help prevent virus particles from accumulating in your home.If it's safe to do so, open doors and windows as wide as possible to let in fresh outdoor air. While it's better to open them wide, leaving a window slightly ajar can also help.If you can, open several doors and windows to allow more fresh air to flow inside.Do not open windows and doors if it is dangerous to you or others (e.g., small children or pets in the home, fall hazards, people in the home with asthma or other respiratory conditions, poor air quality).If opening windows or doors is unsafe, consider other measures to reduce airborne virus particles, such as using air filters and exhaust fans for bathrooms and stoves.Use fans to move airborne virus particles from your home to the outside. Do not leave fans unattended with young children.

Filter the air in your home

Ventilation in homes with stacked stoves-If your home has a central heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC, a system with air ducts that run throughout the house) system equipped with a filter, do the following to trap virus particles: In homes where the air conditioning fan can be controlled by a thermostat, set the fan to "on" instead of "automatic" when you have visitors. This allows the fan to run continuously even when the heat or air conditioner is not on.

Use pleated filters. Pleated filters are more efficient than ordinary furnace filters and can be purchased at hardware stores. Follow the manufacturer's instructions to replace the filter yourself, or ask a professional for help. Change your filter every three months or according to the manufacturer's instructions. Ideally, have the ventilation system checked and adjusted by a professional every year to ensure it is working efficiently.

Consider using a portable air purifier

Using a portable HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filter can take care of filtration if you do not have an HVAC system, or improve filtration if you do. These are the most efficient filters on the market, capturing particles that people exhale when they breathe, talk, sing, cough and sneeze.

When choosing a HEPA cleaner, choose one that is the right size for the room(s). Look for a vacuum cleaner that has an air cleaning rate (CADR) that equals or exceeds the square footage of the room(s) in which it will be used. The greater the CADR, the faster the air is cleaned. For more information, see the Home Air Purifier Guide at EPA.

Turn on the exhaust fan in your bathroom and kitchen poor ventilation-good ventilation 

With good ventilation, the concentration of virus particles in the air is lower and they leave your home faster than with poor ventilation. Exhaust fans above your stove and in your bathroom that lead to the outdoors can help keep air moving out. Although some stove exhaust fans do not direct air outdoors, they can still improve airflow and prevent virus particles from concentrating in one place. Keep the exhaust fan on over your stove and in your bathroom when you have visitors in your home. Keep exhaust fans on for an hour after your visitors leave to remove virus particles that may still be in the air.

Use fans to improve airflow

Place a fan as close as possible to an open window that blows outside. This helps get rid of virus particles in your home by blowing the air outside. Fans can also improve air circulation without an open window. Point fans away from people. Pointing fans at people can blow contaminated air directly at them. Use ceiling fans to improve airflow in the home, whether the windows are open or not.


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