Currently set to No Follow

ASHRAE on COVID-19 HVAC Concerns

The ASHRAE COVID-19 Preparedness Resources provides easily accessible resources from ASHRAE to building industry professionals


COVID-19 HVAC

 

ASHRAE, a global society advancing human well-being through sustainable technology for the built environment, has developed proactive guidance to help address coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) concerns with respect to the operation and maintenance of heating, ventilating and air-conditioning systems.

The ASHRAE COVID-19 Preparedness Resources webpage, ashrae.org/COVID19, provides easily accessible resources from ASHRAE to building industry professionals.

“The recent escalation in the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 is alarming on a global scale,” said 2019-20 ASHRAE President Darryl K. Boyce, P.Eng. “While ASHRAE supports expanded research to fully understand how coronavirus is transmitted, we know that healthy buildings are a part of the solution. ASHRAE’s COVID-19 Preparedness Resources are available as guidance to building owners, operators and engineers on how to best protect occupants from exposure to the virus.”

Available on the webpage is ASHRAE’s recently approved position document on Airborne Infectious Diseases. The Society’s position is that facilities of all types should follow, as a minimum, the latest practical standards and guidelines.

The following publications are referenced in the position document and on the resources webpage:

Read more  Honda Reveals Its Badass Self-Balancing Motorbike

The position document also advises that new and existing healthcare intake and waiting areas, crowded shelters, and similar facilities should go beyond the minimum requirements of these documents, using techniques covered in ASHRAE’s Indoor Air Quality Guide to be even better prepared to control airborne infectious disease (including a future pandemic caused by a new infectious agent).

Because small particles remain airborne for some period of time, the design and operation of COVID-19 HVAC systems that move air can affect disease transmission in several ways, such as by the following:

Supplying clean air to susceptible occupants

  • Containing contaminated air and/or exhausting it to the outdoors
  • Diluting the air in a space with cleaner air from outdoors and/or by filtering the air
  • Cleaning the air within the room

ASHRAE recommends the following strategies of interest to address disease transmission: dilution ventilation, laminar and other in-room flow regimes, differential room pressurization, personalized ventilation, source capture ventilation, filtration (central or unitary), and UVGI (upper room, in-room, and in the airstream).

Owners, operators, and engineers are encouraged to collaborate with infection prevention specialists knowledgeable about transmission of infection in the community and the workplace and about strategies for prevention and risk mitigation.

For access to the full position document, standards, publications, technical committees, research projects and other material to prepare for COVID-19 HVAC, visit the ASHRAE COVID-19 HVAC Preparedness Resources webpage at ashrae.org/COVID19.

 

Watch Live Stream & Real Time Statistics of COVID-19

Other COVID-19 Updates

Tiger Tests Positive for Coronavirus at New York Zoo

Harvard Talks: Cut Salaries or Cut People?

Read more  7 Building Materials: Alternative to Cement, Asphalt, Concrete & Wood

Lamborghini Medical Shields & Surgical Masks for Health Workers

WHO COVID-19 Buildings & Tents Screening Layout Standards

UCLA Engineer Made a Ventilator from Hardware Items

Airbus Gives 3D-Printed Hospital Visors to Health Workers

Airlines COVID-19 Analysis: Aviation Collapsed

Forecast Deaths, Hospitals & Ventilators: COVID-19 Impact, USA Full Report

Ventilation Standards for Buildings Converted to COVID-19 Hospitals

Harvard Talks: The Supply Chain in Post COVID-19 Era

COVID-19 Deaths to Reach 81,000 in US By June – Forecasts by IHME & Univ. of Washington

Top 10 Largest Ventilator Manufacturers in the World

List of Government Officials Tested Positive in PH

Metronic Ventilator Ramping Up Production

Engineers, Can You Help Build a DIY Ventilator for Hospitals?

Water is Our First Line of Defense Against COVID-19

COVID-19 Economic Aftermath on the Construction Industry

Complete List of Companies Working on Coronavirus Vaccine

COVID-19 War: 70K Physicians vs 109M Filipinos

Famous People Who Have Tested Positive for COVID-19

These Politicians Tested Positive for Coronavirus (COVID-19)

Postponed Exhibitions in the Philippines due to COVID-19

Cancelled Major Events Around the World Due to COVID-19

World Bank Gives $12 Billion to COVID-19 Affected Countries

COVID-19 Philippines: DOH on Code Red Status

PPE Shortage Endangering Health Workers Worldwide

The List of COVID-19 Disinfectants Approved by EPA

World Bank Gives $12 Billion to COVID-19 Affected Countries

Air Cargo Demand Down 3.3% due to COVID-19 Disruption

COVID-19 Financial Impacts in the Aviation Industry

COVID-19 Hits January Airline Passenger Demand, IATA

Share via


Like it? Share with your friends!

141
5 shares, 141 points
Patricia Eldridge
Patricia took her MBA in London, UK. She's a model, actress, blogger and a copywriter. Her boyfriend is an overworked and underpaid engineer.

ASHRAE on COVID-19 HVAC Concerns

Send this to a friend