|
Advertising supplement provided by
Broan-Nutone
 |
Continuing
Education
|
Use the following learning
objectives to focus your study while reading this month’s
ARCHITECTURAL RECORD / AIA Continuing Education article.
Learning Objective:
After reading this article, you will be able to:
1. Understand
why ventilation in the home is more important today.
2. Identify
the components of systems that ensure good indoor air
quality.
3. Design
to achieve good indoor air quality.
|
|
Click For Additional
Required Reading
To receive AIA/CES credit, you are required to read
this additional text.
For a faxed copy of the material, call Broan-NuTone
Customer Service at (800)558-1711. The following quiz
questions include information from this material.
|
Todays homes are built tightly,
which makes them more energy efficient. The emphasis on energy
efficiency, however, has led to another unexpected result:
new homes are experiencing air quality problems unknown to
older buildings.
Adequate indoor air quality once could
be taken for granted because houses leaked enough that a sufficient
air supply was produced by accidental ventilation.
Today, tighter houses unpredictably supply adequate air only
part of the timewhenever wind and temperature pressures
are strong enough to force enough air through incidental openings.
The problem began to show up in the late
1970s, when tighter construction became necessary because
of rising energy costs. It was soon apparent that tighter
homes did not always have a healthy and comfortable air supply.
Within a short period of time, various
methods of mechanically providing continuous fresh air for
breathing appeared on the market. Generally, the products
were outgrowths of commercial and institutional technologies
that were modified for the residential field; in fact, most
of todays products and strategies are refinements of
those beginnings.
One such method, mechanical exhaustrange
hoods and bath fans, operated intermittently in kitchens and
bathrooms respectivelyhas been a standard feature in
North American housing for many years. Today, the addition
of continuous mechanical ventilation has become necessary
in response to more tightly built houses.
|