Thinking Inside the Box - Volume 5

Not To Err on Outside Air

By Moses D. F. Ling, PE, RA

Several weeks ago, I had the pleasure of attending a workshop at Woods Hole Research Center. The workshop participants were architects and graduate students involved in teaching environment control systems. The focus of the workshop was to conduct case studies as a means to improve pedagogical delivery. By the second day, participants were engaged in proving a number of hypotheses and collecting data in this award winning building by William McDonough +Partners.

My hypothesis was that offices on the top floor of a building with an open core do not receive fresh air from the outside through an open window. The building operator had shut off the ventilation system assuming the occupants would open the windows for fresh air. At the end, I concluded that natural ventilation strategies need to be carefully considered in the design process. When properly incorporated into the building design, natural ventilation can be pleasing when the outdoor condition is favorable. I would like to share with you the following points of interest.

Through a studious day-long data collecting effort and blowing bubbles in the building, we concluded that air will exit through open windows on the top floor. This implies that the occupants in these top floor offices are receiving second hand air from the core of the building.

At the other end of the design process are the code minimum requirements. The International Mechanical Code mandates placement of outside air inlets. If the natural ventilation strategy is employed, operable windows become outside air inlets.

401.5 Locate outside air exhaust and intakes openings 10’ from lot lines. If the opening fronts on a public way or street, the distance is measured from the center line of the public way.

401.5.1 (a) Locate outdoor air intakes 10’ from any hazardous or noxious contaminants such as chimneys, plumbing vents, street, alleys, parking lots and loading docks.

401.5.1 (b) Where a source of contaminant is located within 10’ of the intake opening, the code mandates locating the intake opening a minimum of 2’ below the contaminant source. Careful consideration is recommended when invoking this rule. Two feet is the code minimum, good design relies on careful considerations by the designer. In the exhaust section of the code, exhausts are prohibited from locations where the discharge air can be readily drawn back into the building.

While operable windows are desirable, and I love them at my home, I don’t open them when it is hot, cold or raining (now that I live in a house with few overhangs. If the control of the indoor environmental conditions is crucial, mechanically introducing treated outside air is the preferable option. The designers can centralize the intakes and locate the louvers strategically. An economizer cycle can be specified to introduce outside air directly when the conditions are favorable.