Mandating indoor air quality for public buildings
If some countries lead by example, standards may increasingly become normalized
Lidia Morawska (Queensland University of Technology, University of Surrey)
Joseph Allen (Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health)
William Bahnfleth (The Pennsylvania State University)
Belinda Bennett (Queensland University of Technology)
P.M. Bluyssen (TU Delft - Environmental & Climate Design)
A.C. Boerstra (TU Delft - Environmental & Climate Design)
G. Buonanno (University of Cassino and Southern Lazio)
Junji Cao (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
S.J. Dancer (Edinburgh Napier University, NHS Lanarkshire)
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Abstract
People living in urban and industrialized societies, which are expanding globally, spend more than 90% of their time in the indoor environment, breathing indoor air (IA). Despite decades of research and advocacy, most countries do not have legislated indoor air quality (IAQ) performance standards for public spaces that address concentration levels of IA pollutants (1). Few building codes address operation, maintenance, and retrofitting, and most do not focus on airborne disease transmission. But the COVID-19 pandemic has made all levels of society, from community members to decision-makers, realize the importance of IAQ for human health, wellbeing, productivity, and learning. We propose that IAQ standards be mandatory for public spaces. Although enforcement of IAQ performance standards in homes is not possible, homes must be designed and equipped so that they could meet the standards.