Posting at the request of Sara Bayer of Magnusson Architecture and Planning, who will soon join this group:
"In our quest to achieve Passive House EUI levels in all of our multifamily projects in a healthy manner, we are encountering pushback on the one item that is not really code min just yet (in NYC) and adds real cost: ERV’s. Our understanding is that with exhaust only ventilation strategies, and today’s energy code airtightness, we are at the very least potentially reducing oxygen levels inside bedrooms to unsafe levels, especially with doors closed at night. (And trickle vents and supplying to the corridor doesn’t work to actually provide air changes). It seems that lessons learned from the sick building syndrome era, haven’t been implemented yet! Passive House was a game changer because it also focused on comfort/health (and verification). We strongly believe we need to clearly express how important ERV’s are while we tighten up our facades. We are looking for some assistance to calculate the change of O2 to CO2 to demonstrate the issue. Has someone conducted this calc or aware of a scientific consultant who can?
Steps could be:
- Calculate volume of a typical bedroom
- Calculate area of façade of that bedroom
- Calculate, using code min airtightness, how much air comes in through that façade area, per a unit of time.
- Assuming the bedroom door is closed and no infiltration from the facade, calculate at what rate it takes a sleeping person to convert the volume of oxygen in that room to CO2. Assume we are starting with “normal” air concentration of gasses. Determine at what moment in time (after how many hours) CO2 levels reach unsafe levels, over 1000ppm usually.
- Assuming an infiltration rate from the façade, calculate how long this would lengthen the time it would take to get to those unsafe levels.
- Calculate some infiltration from under the bedroom door, and assuming its “fresh”, how this also may lengthen the time to get to unsafe levels. We could do the same for a trickle vent– but these two numbers should be separated out from the calculation because they are not reliable sources of “fresh” air. (Some thought should be given to if one would want to consider each apartment as an airtight compartment instead of the bedroom alone.)