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Build Environ


Title:Environmental Perceptions and Health before and after Relocation to a Green Building
Author(s):MacNaughton P; Spengler J; Vallarino J; Santanam S; Satish U; Allen J;
Address:"Center for Health and the Global Environment, Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA. Industrial Assessment Center, Center of Excellence, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA. Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY-Upstate Medical School, Syracuse, NY, USA"
Journal Title:Build Environ
Year:2016
Volume:20160509
Issue:
Page Number:138 - 144
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.011
ISSN/ISBN:0360-1323 (Print) 1873-684X (Electronic) 0360-1323 (Linking)
Abstract:"Green buildings are designed to have low environmental impacts and improved occupant health and well-being. Improvements to the built environment including ventilation, lighting, and materials have resulted in improved indoor environmental quality (IEQ) in green buildings, but the evidence around occupant health is currently centered around environmental perceptions and self-reported health. To investigate the objective impact of green buildings on health, we tracked IEQ, self-reported health, and heart rate in 30 participants from green and conventional buildings for two weeks. 24 participants were then selected to be relocated to the Syracuse Center of Excellence, a LEED platinum building, for six workdays. While they were there, ventilation, CO(2), and volatile organic compound (VOC) levels were changed on different days to match the IEQ of conventional, green, and green+ (green with increased ventilation) buildings. Participants reported improved air quality, odors, thermal comfort, ergonomics, noise and lighting and fewer health symptoms in green buildings prior to relocation. After relocation, participants consistently reported fewer symptoms during the green building conditions compared to the conventional one, yet symptom counts were more closely associated with environmental perceptions than with measured IEQ. On average, participants had 4.7 times the odds of reporting a lack of air movement, 1.4 more symptoms (p-value = 0.019) and a 2 bpm higher heart rate (p-value < 0.001) for a 1000 ppm increase in indoor CO(2) concentration. These findings suggest that occupant health in green and conventional buildings is driven by both environmental perceptions and physiological pathways"
Keywords:Carbon Dioxide Environmental Perceptions Green Buildings Heartrate Symptoms;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEMacNaughton, Piers Spengler, John Vallarino, Jose Santanam, Suresh Satish, Usha Allen, Joseph eng T32 ES007069/ES/NIEHS NIH HHS/ NIEHS/ England 2016/10/08 Build Environ. 2016 Aug 1; 104:138-144. doi: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.05.011. Epub 2016 May 9"

 
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