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jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:22 PM Mar 2020

Do we have an HVAC specialist here?


I’m interested in HVAC systems such as you find in apartment buildings in urban areas.

Everyone knows that Legionnaire’s disease was propagated through standing water in HVAC systems, and that once it was understood, countermeasures were taken.

In, say, an urban apartment building, does the air return work the way it does in a single family home?

Is air returned from all of the apartment units, mixed together, and recirculated?
11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Do we have an HVAC specialist here? (Original Post) jberryhill Mar 2020 OP
I am anything BUT an HVAC specialist. But, I recall that Denver & other cities used shared air hlthe2b Mar 2020 #1
Not mixed with others. Only for that area. FloridaBlues Mar 2020 #2
Can you elaborate? jberryhill Mar 2020 #3
The negitive air pressure should not circulate into other others in order to keep it contained FloridaBlues Mar 2020 #7
Not my industry but I see where you're going with this. herding cats Mar 2020 #4
Apartments should not share AC systems ornotna Mar 2020 #5
What about forced air heat? jberryhill Mar 2020 #6
The same with heat ornotna Mar 2020 #8
Thank you jberryhill Mar 2020 #9
No problem ornotna Mar 2020 #10
DH (who is an expert in this) Bettie Mar 2020 #11

hlthe2b

(102,227 posts)
1. I am anything BUT an HVAC specialist. But, I recall that Denver & other cities used shared air
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:26 PM
Mar 2020

exchange in apartment buildings (at least the older ones) as justification to enact strict anti-smoking ordinances. So...?

 

jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
3. Can you elaborate?
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:34 PM
Mar 2020

I admire an economy of words, but not sure what you are saying.

If there were, say, something smaller and lighter than even Legionella, could it make its way through the HVAC from one apartment to another?

FloridaBlues

(4,008 posts)
7. The negitive air pressure should not circulate into other others in order to keep it contained
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:44 PM
Mar 2020

Possible to do each room that way but not using the same air content.

herding cats

(19,564 posts)
4. Not my industry but I see where you're going with this.
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:35 PM
Mar 2020

I will say that SARS (original version) was possibly linked to bad plumbing vents in Hong Kong.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/leaky-plumbing-linked-to-sars-spread/



There was another possible link with SARS-CoV-2 and bad plumbing vents this year also in Hong Kong.

https://www.livescience.com/coronavirus-spread-building-pipes.html

 

jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
6. What about forced air heat?
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:41 PM
Mar 2020

I’m totally ignorant of the subject which, yeah now that I think about it, is probably a good reason for me not to worry about stuff I don’t understand.

ornotna

(10,799 posts)
8. The same with heat
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 09:45 PM
Mar 2020

Each apt. would be separate. The heating coils would be with the evaporator unit.

Bettie

(16,090 posts)
11. DH (who is an expert in this)
Fri Mar 20, 2020, 10:01 PM
Mar 2020

says that older heating systems tend to be common air return systems, but newer ones work more like a single family home, so it really depends on how old the system itself is, rather than how old the building is.

His explanation was more involved, but he doesn't want to sit down and type right now.

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