The 44th AIVC Conference "Retrofitting the Building Stock: Challenges and Opportunities for Indoor Environmental Quality", was held in Dublin, Ireland on 9-10 October 2024. Contains 127 papers and/or summaries.

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Smart ventilation in residential buildings has gained rising attention recently for the benefits of reducing energy consumption and improving indoor environmental quality.
Yu Wang, Daniela Mortari, Manfred Plagmann, Nathan Mendes, Gaëlle Guyot
The BENEFIT project seeks to assess indoor environmental quality and occupant comfort in energy efficient non-domestic Irish buildings with the aim of developing ventilation guidelines for future retrofits and new builds.
Jorge Fernandes, Miriam Byrne, Adam Collison, James A. McGrath
The rapid growth in the use of low-cost sensors for indoor air quality (IAQ) measurement campaigns, following the COVID-19 pandemic, has significantly improved public awareness of ventilation and IAQ in buildings.
Gráinne McGill, Marco-Felipe King, James McGrath, Douglas Booker
Project RESILIENCE set out to examine overheating in a variety of building archetypes, but also examined several aspects of overheating related to the tools that are used, the weather data that has been employed in dynamic simul
Adam O’ Donovan, Paul D. O’Sullivan
There is an increasing need to consider and evaluate the effect of existing ambient warmness on current low energy buildings to determine if current guidelines and standards are robust or resilient in the face of projected futur
Adam O’ Donovan, Elahe Tavakoli, Paul D. O’Sullivan
Project RESILIENCE set out to examine overheating risk in a variety of non-residential building archetypes, but also examined several aspects of both overheating risk metrics and indoor thermal resilience evaluation criteria.
Paul D. O’Sullivan, Adam O’ Donovan
Thermal comfort of adolescents (10-17 year olds) in school classrooms is an important but less explored topic. The classroom thermal environment impacts students comfort, learning, and health.
Asit K Mishra, Pawel Wargocki, Eilis J O’Reilly
Children spend about 80-90% of their time indoors, making the quality of indoor environments (IEQ) crucial, particularly since children are more susceptible to pollutants due to their developing bodies and higher relative air in
Lara Tookey, Mikael Boulic, Ilaria Stura, Wyatt Page, Pawel Wargocki, Hennie van Heerden
During the COVID-19 pandemic, besides sanitising, masking, and increasing social distancing, opening classroom windows was the NZ Ministry of Education's main requirement for reopening schools.
Mikael Boulic, Pierre Bombardier, Andrew Russell, David Waters, Angelo Cuyo, Hennie van Heerden, Jean-Richard Templier, Robyn Phipps
Improving air quality in existing classrooms can be difficult if retrofitting a mechanical ventilation system is considered too expensive or cannot be implemented due to other reasons, e.g., heritage protection.
Simon Beck, Gabriel Rojas
This study focuses on the impact of filtration efficiency level and airflow control, based on CO2, on indoor air quality described by particle concentration in an urban low energy consumption nursery school during an autumn and a winter period.
Mirela Robitu, Alain Ginestet, Dominique Pugnet, Jean-Hugues Salazar
Identifying factors that affect classroom concentrations of particulate matter is important for enabling effective mitigation of the associated negative health and cognitive effects, of which children can be especially susceptib
Alice Handy, Henry Burridge, the SAMHE consortium
The project aims to investigate the degree of influence that outdoor conditions may have on the indoor environment in Norwegian schools.
Iselin Ørbek Eide, Christer Eskedal, Kai Gustavsen, Kent Hart, Azimil Gani Alam, Guangyu Cao
In high-efficient residential buildings, energy use due to ventilation can reach 60% of the total building.
Baptiste Poirier, Gaelle Guyot, Monika Woloszyn
This work quantifies the chronic harm caused by long-term exposure to common indoor air contaminants in dwellings located in the global north. Two methods are used to compute DALYs.
Benjamin Jones, Gioberttti Morantes, Constanza Molina, Max Sherman
In France, the regulation context for ventilation is based on the decree « Arreté de 1982 » which is a prescriptive regulation, requiring extracted flowrate in every utility room.
Valérie Leprince, Baptiste Poirier
In many countries, the traditional method of ventilating dwellings involved natural ventilation, based on the operation of windows and high levels of infiltration through the building envelope, particularly through windows and w
Sonia García-Ortega, Pilar Linares-Alemparte
Efforts must be made to promote the use of efficient ventilation systems in buildings with the aim of reducing energy demand, as ventilation is a major source of energy loss.
Pilar Linares-Alemparte, Sonia García-Ortega
The context of climate change and the need of saving energy has required rethinking the ventilation and the air change rates in buildings, because of their increased impact on thermal losses.
Gaëlle Guyot, Valérie Leprince
This study explored the design optimization possibilities for Danish retirement homes while considering an increased risk of overheating due to elevated temperatures imposed by climate change.
Julie Lindgaard Hald, Daria Zukowska-Tejsen, Jakub Kolarik

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