In January 1912, in the depths of a New York City winter, an
unusual new apartment complex opened on the Upper East Side.
The East River Homes were designed to help poor families
fend off tuberculosis — a fearsome, airborne disease — by turning dark, airless
tenements inside out. Passageways led from the street to capacious internal
courtyards, where outdoor staircases wound their way up to each apartment.
Floor-to-ceiling windows opened onto balconies where ailing residents could
sleep. The rooftops drew tenants outside with covered porches and reclining
seats, on which tuberculosis patients convalesced.
اضافة اعلان
“It is believed that this type of dwelling will not only be
an efficient aid in the actual treatment of cases of incipient tuberculosis,
but an even greater benefit will be its influence as a measure of prevention,”
wrote Dr. Henry Shively, who ran a tuberculosis clinic and developed the idea
for the complex.
One of the paramount lessons of the COVID-19 pandemic is
that fresh air matters. Although officials were initially reluctant to
acknowledge that the coronavirus was airborne, it soon became clear that the
virus spread easily through the air indoors. As the pandemic raged on, experts
began urging building operators to crank up their ventilation systems and
Americans to keep their windows open. The message: A well-ventilated building
could be a bulwark against disease.
It was not a novel idea. More than a century ago, when
infectious diseases ravaged cities in the United States and Europe, public
health reformers preached the power of good ventilation, and open-air homes,
hospitals, and schools sprang up in New York, London, and other locales on both
sides of the Atlantic.
Skylines crowded with air-conditioned towers
However, over the past century, society lost hold of that
idea. Scientific advances turned viruses into problems that could be solved at
the individual, biomedical level, with medicines and vaccines, rather than
through infrastructure or societal change. Skylines became crowded with
air-conditioned towers. An energy crisis encouraged engineers to seal
structures tightly. And by the time the coronavirus arrived, Americans were
spending their days in schools, offices and homes that could barely breathe.
“So, you get a virus that spread nearly entirely indoors
butting up against our building infrastructure that we know is not designed for
health,” said Joseph Allen, an expert on healthy buildings at the T.H. Chan
School of Public Health at Harvard.
Experts worry that focus will shift elsewhere
Three years later, many Americans have a new, hard-earned
appreciation for the health benefits of clean air. But some experts worry that
the lesson may not stick. The COVID public health emergency has now expired,
and public attention has shifted to other airborne threats, such as the acrid
wildfire smoke that has recently smothered many Eastern cities. Given these
developments, it might be tempting to seal our buildings back up again.
That would be a mistake, experts say, especially in an era
that is certain to bring more pandemics and air-quality crises. Being better
prepared for the future, they say, will require us to avoid the missteps of the
past.
“There’s a real history of forgetting, especially in the
United States,” said Sara Jensen Carr, an architect at Northeastern University
who studies the connection between design and health. “I think we’re on the
verge of forgetting the importance of fresh air again.”
‘An abundant supply of fresh air’
In the 19th century city, infectious diseases —
tuberculosis, cholera, smallpox, yellow fever, typhoid — were an ever-present
danger. Many aspects of the squalid urban environment, with its overflowing
sewers and lack of clean drinking water, fueled these outbreaks. But poor
ventilation was also to blame.
In New York City’s notorious tenements, many rooms lacked
windows to the outdoors, and buildings were sometimes packed together so tightly
that an open window provided little breeze. Conditions were especially dismal
in cellar apartments. “Their foul, damp, sepulchral-like air being never
visited by pure air and sunlight, they are fitter receptacles for the dead than
the living,” the Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor wrote in
an 1853 report.
Germ theory
Germ theory had not yet gained widespread acceptance;
instead, the long-standing theory of miasma held that disease was the result of
“bad air.” So, sanitary reformers began calling for an overhaul of urban
spaces, including improvements in ventilation. “An abundant supply of fresh
air, at a proper temperature, is the first requisite of health in every place,”
the Citizens’ Association of New York wrote in a report published in 1865.
New York undertook a variety of reforms, including
restricting airless, underground apartments; requiring windows to the outdoors;
and providing more space between buildings. Other cities and states developed
new building codes and ventilation standards. “Ventilation comes next to
godliness,” the president of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating
Engineers declared in 1895 at the organization’s annual meeting.
Similar reforms were also underway in hospitals thanks, in
part, to the crusading work of Florence Nightingale, the British nurse who was
stationed at a filthy military hospital during the Crimean War in 1854. The
nurse, who believed in the healing power of “air from without,” helped
popularize pavilion-style hospitals, which featured long, narrow wards with a
row of large, open windows running along each wall.
“The entire building is designed around promoting the
movement of fresh air,” said Annmarie Adams, an architectural historian at
McGill University.
Outdoor air became part of the treatment regimen for
tuberculosis, inspiring the design of sanitariums and fueling an open-air
school movement that had students attending class on rooftops, in army tents
and on ferries.
Minimum standards
In the US today, the American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, or ASHRAE, sets widely used
indoor air quality standards and specifies minimum ventilation rates. In
practice, these rates typically govern how buildings are designed, rather than
how they are operated day to day, and many structures deliver less fresh air
than they were designed to provide, experts said.
The standards define acceptable indoor air quality as air
that does not have “harmful” levels of “known contaminants,” and with which at
least 80% of occupants are satisfied. But infectious disease is not a focus.
“It says nothing about ‘Does this level of air quality
protect you from risk of infection when the seasonal flu is going around or
when there’s a novel epidemic disease, like COVID?’” said William Bahnfleth, an
architectural engineer at Penn State University and chair of the epidemic task
force at ASHRAE.
That is finally changing. ASHRAE is developing a new
standard focused on reducing the transmission of airborne viruses that applies
both to new buildings and existing ones.
It covers not only the rate of air exchange but also the use
of filters and air cleaners, which can be highly effective ways to remove particles
from the air. (Updated ventilation guidelines from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention cover filters and air cleaners, too.)
Although the focus is on infectious disease, many of these
same strategies should provide protection from wildfire smoke or other
pollutants that may seep into buildings. The new recommendations are unlikely
to make a big difference unless they are incentivized or enforced in some way,
Bahnfleth said. He noted that there is little government regulation of indoor air
quality. Some government entity “needs to take some responsibility,” he said.
We have an opening to wage a new war on bad air, experts
said, one that will be aided by tools and technologies that were not available
to 19th century sanitary reformers. But the key insight, and the animating
spirit, is unchanged. “Our buildings,” said Allen, “should be seen as a public
health tool.”