The Healthy Facilities Institute

February 22, 2011

We are always looking for resources to improve facilities for the benefit of their users. One such online resource for a better, safer built environment is The Healthy Facilities Institute.

Boasting a stellar advisory board with PhDs in Public Health, Exposure, Epidemiology and Risk, environmental microbiologists, building science and indoor air quality specialists, work environment and sustainable hospitals experts, and  toxic use reduction scientists, the HFI is poised to advise workplace and healthcare professionals how to make their domains healthier.

The Healthy Facilities Institute (HFI) strives to provide authoritative information for creating and maintaining clean, healthy indoor environments. Since buildings are ecosystems, HFI works to address the many interrelated aspects of built environments — such as air, water, energy, materials and resources, green cleaning, indoor environmental quality, waste management, people and more — as an integrated or holistic system. Inasmuch as “Clean” is a metaphor for healthy indoor spaces, HFI also emphasizes prevention and removal of pollutants or contaminants to help ensure optimum conditions for living, learning and working.

Facilities managers will benefit from the types of advisories the site offers. Recently, the HFI advised how some cleaning products designed to make our buildings cleaner and healthier may contribute to asthma. Many people suffer from cleaning chemicals used in the workplace, and there used to be few alternatives.

According to K.D. Rosenman, MD, Department of Medicine, Michigan State University: “Cleaning products contain a diverse group of chemicals . . . their potential to cause or aggravate asthma has recently been recognized.”

The Healthy Facilities Institute therefore recommends limiting or targeting the use of products containing ingredients such as bleach, quaternary ammonium compounds or “quats”, phthalates, and harmful (volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and considering appropriate alternative chemistries or non-chemical options.

“That is not to say that products containing these ingredients are inherently bad; it’s important to recognize that these chemistries do serve a useful purpose,” said Allen Rathey, founder and president of The Health Facilities Institute (HFI).  “However, it’s equally important to recognize the need for caution, to target these chemistries to proper applications, and to consider alternative and more benign methods where effective and practical.”

Ingredients such as bleach, quats, phthalates, and many VOCs found in typical cleaning products have all been associated with causing asthma or other respiratory ills.

Use of quats – compounds in floor cleaners and disinfecting products – may also promote asthma. Volatile ingredients in foodservice or kitchen cleaning formulas, furniture polishes, and other cleaners can irritate mucous membranes and contribute to respiratory disease.

Prudent avoidance of products containing suspect ingredients makes sense, especially when practical alternatives are available. Good ventilation is also vital when products containing potentially asthma-promoting ingredients are used.

At AHR, they were looking for green

February 18, 2010

At the AHR Expo in Orlando at the end of January, nearly 30,000 visitors were on a shared mission: To operate their buildings more efficiently, save money, and walk the green walk for clients and employees.

And the air-conditioning, heating, and refrigeration exhibitors were prepared with the answers. What was hot for green? Among the interesting products I viewed that supported sustainable buildings were: REHAU’s Ecoair Ground-Air Heat Exchangers; Movin’ Cool’s Spot Air-Conditioners; Iconics’ FacilityWorX, the open-standards platform for integrating building automation systems; LG ‘s Environmental Control Manager; NTS Solar Collectors; Baltimore Aircoil’s Ice Thermal Storage; Eagle Mountain’s Intelligent Climate Control System; Cleaver-Brooks’ Boiler Operation Optimization Savings Test (BOOST); and Daikin’s heat pump technology VRV III-C.

Among the AHR Show’s highlights were a solar air-conditioning and refrigeration workshop; LEED workshops on how to be part of the LEED team and how to  manage a LEED project; ENERGY STAR: Your Customer’s Path to Green, Sustainable Buildings, where exhibitors could learn how to help facilities managers implement  ENERGY STAR-generated savings; and a session on hydronic design for solar and geothermal heat pump systems. There was quite a buzz around “geothermal” throughout the show as attendees and exhibitors alike recognized its wider applications.

The AHR show management indicates a nearly eight percent increase from the 2005 AHR Expo in Orlando with attendees from from 120 different countries to see 1,823 exhibiting companies from around the world.

Next year, AHR Expo  is in Las Vegas, January 31-February 2.

New Shades of Green

September 19, 2009

We understand the conundrums and challenges faced by facilities management professionals practicing sustainability. To meet your critical sustainable FM information needs, we updated and added a few new shades of green to this site. There’s a lot of green news out there. The editors here will only present sustainable content as it relates to facilities management, providing a resource where FMs, engineers, architects and designers can find information to support the sustainable initiatives they are striving to achieve at their corporations, organizations or institutions.

We kept the best elements of The McMorrow Sustainable Facilities Management Report and added a new green blazer with more pockets of information, like this blog, so we have an interactive space to hear from you and to tell you what’s happening from the conferences and trade shows we attend. Foremost, Sustainable FM news is covered in areas such as: energy conservation, industry standards, recycling, education, building technology, green ambition, water, IAQ, manufacturers and vendors, and associations.

Facilities pros striving to have sustainable facilities are always asking us for product tips and advice, so when we find a green product, you will find it prominently featured on the home page and can click through to a dedicated products section with links to the vendors.

Interact with The McMorrow Reports. We hope you will forward a McMorrow Report page link to a fellow FM professional, building owner, architect, designer, or engineer and encourage them to sign-up for The McMorrow Reports e-newsletters that highlight site updates.

Eileen McMorrow

Editor & Publisher


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