A.Ellen Tohn of ERT
Associates, an environmental consultant and a
senior advisor to the
Asthma Regional Council,
replies: Asthma and allergies are related --
asthma is a breathing difficulty often brought on
by an allergic reaction to certain triggers in the
environment. There are some things you can do as a
builder to help reduce asthma triggers, which can
reduce the frequency and severity of attacks.
A few main allergens are responsible for most
asthma attacks -- chiefly, dust allergens, pet
dander, pests (especially cockroaches), and mold.
You should try to build in a way that helps to
reduce all of those. But many asthma sufferers are
particularly sensitive to specific allergens, and
you should ask clients with asthma to get their
doctor's recommendation for which triggers to
concentrate on. The doctor can test them to
identify their individual sensitivities.
If dust is the main issue, here's how you target
it: You want smooth, hard surfaces that are easy to
keep clean. So go for hardwood, tile, or vinyl
flooring, not carpet. Keep trimwork simple so it
doesn't hide dust. A central vac system can help if
the exhaust is directed outdoors. Unless they have
effective high-efficiency filters, regular vacuums
tend to spread dust around and put it in the air,
making things worse instead of better (mopping is
better than vacuuming, in any case). Forced-air
heating also may keep dust airborne, so radiant
heat might be a preferred choice.
Two thirds of home dust is tracked in from
outside. Give your clients a place to take off
shoes and boots before entering the house. If they
don't want to do that, a wood rack or bristly
welcome mat will at least help them knock dirt off
their shoes.
Humidity control also helps with dust allergens.
Dust mites, tiny insects that live on the flakes of
skin that make up a part of indoor dust, thrive and
grow in relative humidities of 50% or higher, and
are a major asthma trigger. Relative humidity of
30% or 40% should help suppress dust mite activity.
Indoor RH should be kept as low as your clients can
tolerate: Give them a prominent humidity gauge for
monitoring indoor conditions, and install
humidistat controls on the heating and cooling
systems.
You can't do much about pets -- that's your
clients' business. But you may be able to help with
pests like cockroaches. Build the envelope tight
and eliminate cracks, voids, and other "roach
highways" that let bugs in and help them hide. Make
it easy to keep kitchen and dining areas clean --
no hard-to-sweep or hard-to-mop nooks and crannies.
Low-toxicity borate insecticides are very effective
against roaches, and you can treat framing and wall
cavities with borate powders or sprays before
enclosing them.
As for mold, it needs moisture to grow and
spread. Ordinary good building practices are
effective against that. Use good drainage plane and
flashing details for roofs, walls, windows, and
doors; that will prevent leaks. Make certain that
plumbing does not leak, and place plumbing runs
where they can be accessed and repaired. Avoid any
thermal shortcuts or insulation defects that create
cold zones on exterior walls -- condensation at
cold spots can harbor mold. Use good foundation
drainage and put a moisture barrier between your
foundation and the ground -- ground moisture is a
major contributor to moldy home environments. And
again, control indoor air humidity -- keep it as
dry as your clients can stand it.
.Ventilation is the final piece. Install a
balanced ventilation system that filters incoming
air and keeps humidity low, summer and winter. When
you install a bath exhaust fan, it's worth running
side ducts to closets. That helps flush out the
mustiness and keeps any allergens that develop in
the closet from spreading to living areas. And
don't cut corners on fans -- install quiet,
effective fans (less than 2 sones) that your
clients will not mind operating.