Residential ventilation – LIVING
A good indoor climate in the home requires innovative technology and ventilation units of extremely high quality, whether newly built or renovated.
Ventilation is the key to a good indoor climate
Legislation places high demands on ventilation. Balance between supply air and extract air and efficient heat recovery contribute to achieving a good indoor climate without compromising the energy framework.
Our ventilation solutions are designed as decentralised or central residential ventilation. In recent years, decentralised residential ventilation has become widespread, which is partly due to the DS428 Danish fire standard and its stricter requirements for the ventilation solution.
Decentralised residential ventilation is characterised by one ventilation unit per dwelling. Central home ventilation is characterised by a common ventilation unit that ventilates several homes.
There are advantages and barriers to both decentralised and centralised residential ventilation, so you should consider the following in relation to your project.
Decentralized ventilation
Benefits
Cheapest for smaller residential buildings (few homes)
User influence (VAV) = satisfaction
Decentralised payment of electricity
Lower energy consumption (SFP), but increased power consumption for automation
No need for VEX on roof or in technical room
Barriers
Service is more expensive and more cumbersome
The solution takes up living space
De-icing and heating coil in home
Expensive/difficult monitoring
Noise from the system
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