To investigate the impacts of an energy efficiency retrofit, indoor air quality and resident health were evaluated at a low‐income senior housing apartment complex in Phoenix, Arizona, before and after a green energy building renovation. Indoor and outdoor air quality sampling was carried out simultaneously with a questionnaire to characterize personal habits and general health of residents. Measured indoor formaldehyde levels before the building retrofit routinely exceeded reference exposure limits, but in the long‐term follow‐up sampling, indoor formaldehyde decreased for the entire study population by a statistically significant margin. Indoor PM levels were dominated by fine particles and showed a statistically significant decrease in the long‐term follow‐up sampling within certain resident subpopulations (i.e. residents who report smoking and residents who had lived longer at the apartment complex).
Details
- The Effects of an Energy Efficiency Retrofit on Indoor Air Quality
- Frey, S.E. (Author)
- Destaillats, H. (Author)
- Cohn, S. (Author)
- Ahrentzen, S. (Author)
- Fraser, M.P. (Author)
- Digital object identifier: 10.1111/ina.12134
- Corresponding Authors:
Hugo Destaillats
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
hdestaillats@lbl.gov
Matthew Fraser
Arizona State University
matthew.fraser@asu.edu
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Frey, SE, et. al. (2015). The effects of an energy efficiency retrofit on indoor air quality. Indoor air, 25:2, 210-219. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ina.12134