Hi All, this is primarily directed at our Sustainable MEP folks, but please anyone with insight feel free to weigh in.
I am increasingly seeing designs and specifications asking for Passive House levels of airtightness as verified by blower door testing, but with traditional ventilation system designs.
To me, Passive House US has 2 main components:
1) Super insulated airtight buildings, and
2) Continuous, balanced ventilation with high efficiency energy recovery.
The latter of those two ensures good IAQ, and it makes me very nervous that we are reaching for the airtightness goals without the continuous ventilation piece.
After all, Sick Building Syndrome (SBS) became a thing in the 70’s for precisely that reason: Highly insulated, airtight buildings, that didn’t have good enough ventilation. Presumably our technologies and understanding of building science has collectively evolved to the point that the mistakes we made that led to SBS won’t be repeated, but again I just get nervous about these crazy airtight buildings at PH levels for airtightness but with just minimum code ventilation rates. And, I was nervous about it before we had a global pandemic.
I am a huge advocate for airtightness for a lot of reasons, but not without the caveats of understanding the knock-on impacts related to it for things like controlling humidity and general IAQ in the building.
Do you SMEPer’s think my concerns are overblown? When this came up most recently on a project, PH airtightness was listed as a desired energy conservation measure, but there was no discussion of amendments to the ventilation system design. I expressed my reservations to the Mech. Engineer, and they said their code compliant ventilation designs aren’t relying on infiltration for IAQ and their system would be good whether we had regular code airtightness or PH airtightness. But what do you think I should I be using to make my own determinations on critiquing the mechanical design in these situations (this is probably the 4th project in the last year this issue has come up):
# of Air Changes / Hour in all spaces, CO2 monitor setpoints for Demand Controlled Ventilation, efficiency rating of the filters in the system, recirculated air to outdoor air ratios, all the above, etc.?
We could always use ongoing air quality monitoring to address issues after the project is built, but I’d like to avoid those issues ahead of time if possible.
Interested to hear your thoughts, and a P.S. thanks to Luke, Kim, and Pete for their great Winter Covid HVAC presentation last week.
- code required ventilation rate is for human bioeffluence control (I do not smell you), not necessarily for healthy ventilation.
- "clean" air not necessarily has to come from outside, e.g. California wild fire and outdoor air contaminants
- Both indoor or outdoor air can have potential issues.
So, a few things: