When More Ventilation Doesn’t Sound Good

AW Louvers’ Wayne Irvine

In an open letter to the window industry, MD of AW Louvers, Wayne Irvine, explains why the change to ventilation regulations is vital to the health of buildings and their occupants. But there can be downsides.

Changes to Approved Document F of the Building Regulations come into force in June, writes Irvine. Buildings need ventilation because they need to breathe. When you ventilate a building, you help to get rid of those things that are bad for occupants’ health, such as mould and disease.

There has been a general tendency to restrict ventilation by reducing air leakage in buildings. Part F of the Building Regulations has gone some way to solving that problem but there are other issues associated with ventilation, such as poor acoustics.

If you put vents in your windows, you increase the chance of introducing outside noise. The more air that you allow through a ventilator, the worse the performance you will get with the acoustic performance.

 

Optimums

Ventilation is there to improve the quality of life inside houses and offices, which is why our vents – either trickle vents, through-frame vents, over-frame vents, or glazed-in vents – are designed to keep outside noise to a minimum while providing the optimum air flow for a healthy home.

The primary objective of a trickle ventilator is to provide background ventilation. Whereas an acoustic trickle ventilator needs to provide background ventilation and acoustic performance, so you must consider the acoustic performance in the open position so that you're getting both ventilation and acoustic benefits.

Our range of ventilators have different air intake sizes: the smaller the air intake, the better the acoustic value; the greater the air intake, the lower the acoustic value because you're letting air pass through a point in the building facade.

 

Knowledge

It's very important that specifiers, fabricators, and installers understand what it is they're buying, what they're trying to achieve, and how they're going to achieve it interface-wise with their products.

Also, if you don't get the right ventilation strategy early on, you're going to have a problem with cost. There is a big difference between an acoustic trickle slot vent and an over frame vent, which provides more air and higher DNEW sound reduction. So, you’ve got to get the right product for the right application.

And it’s important the ventilation specifications reflect the sound reduction in the open position, not the closed position, as you only get ventilation in the open position. The performance levels in the closed position are somewhat academic.

 

Solutions

We can provide solutions to cope with most scenarios. For example, the SSH 2500EA Acoustic Trickle Ventilator from AW Louvers has a slot height of just 11mm and can provide a sound reduction of 46Dnew in one acoustic model in open position; and 48Dnew with two acoustic models in open position.

Ventilation is there to improve the well-being of building occupants. While we focus on improving air flow within a building, it is vital that we don’t lose sight of a window’s acoustic properties.

Picture: AW Louvers’ Wayne Irvine.

www.awlouvers.co.uk

 

Article written by Cathryn Ellis
18th March 2022

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