Better Office Ambience Leads to Increased Productivity

How would you like to have your work ambience? Properly aerated and cool, which helps you to keep fresh and active all day? Of course yes, work place is a place which is already burdened with work load and the heat of office politics. It surely needs more fresh air and coolness than anywhere else. An office facilitated with proper ventilation systems improves its work quality at first as it is. To give good output it is important to have a cool mind which is relaxed and comfortable with the surroundings.

It is really unfair with the employees to work in heat and non ventilated offices to demand good work quality and expect them to stay in office for long hours. It affects work quality and more than that increases attrition rate of the company due to unfavourable office conditions. Heat recovery ventilation is a must in offices especially with larger population per square area. Density increases heat production and creates an uncomfortable atmosphere which suffocates employees and work. Good office culture means properly ventilated airy office that has proper supply of fresh air.

Fresh air is a must for fresh ideas. To work in an atmosphere that is physically not pleasurable creates faster mental fatigue and thus affects productivity. To improve productivity of any organisation, a happy employee batch is essential. Employees are happy when working conditions are good and they feel comfortable working there. HRV systems help to reduce the suffocation in the office by eliminating heat produced by the breaths of people and incorporating fresh air from outside. It transfers excessive heat to the outside, pulling in fresh cooler air from outside inside the office.

HRVs are stand-alone devices that operate independently, or they built-in, or added to existing HVAC systems. For a small building in which nearly every room has an exterior wall, then the heat recovery ventilation device can be small and provide ventilation for a single room. A larger building would require either many small units, or a large central unit. The only requirements for the building are an air supply, either directly from an exterior wall or ducted to one, and an energy supply for air circulation, such as wind energy or electricity for a fan. When used with ‘central’ HVAC systems, then the system would be of the ‘forced-air’ type.

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