Approved Document F
Approved Document F specifically applies to building ventilation and indoor air quality. This statutory guidance document dictates that adequate ventilation must be provided to guard against internal moisture build-up that could adversely impact the property’s structure. If not addressed, condensation and poor indoor airflow can affect the long-term health and wellbeing of residents.
Domestic and non-domestic property ventilation
Ventilation is a vital consideration for all property types, and rightly so. In the UK, we spend up to 90% of our time indoors on average - inside our homes, offices, shops and other recreation and leisure spots - and with adults breathing approximately 20,000 times every single day, indoor air quality is of paramount importance. New homes especially, generally built to be more comfortable and airtight for occupants, need to take extra steps to ventilate adequately while still providing a comfortable living environment.
Approved Document F makes it clear that, within domestic properties, fresh air must be able to circulate continuously and with ease throughout the whole building. It states that extract ventilation must be used within any areas of increased humidity or air pollution, such as an extractor fan being situated over an oven. Purge ventilation must also be possible. The form that this takes will differ from property to property, and in some instances, can refer simply to being able to let polluted air out via an open window. You can learn more about new build ventilation systems for new build properties from our experts.
Non-domestic premises, such as offices and shops, must also ensure continuous circulation of clean air. Ventilation systems are now used in a wide range of heavily populated public spaces, which extract stale, stagnant air from the interior environment and deliver filtered fresh air into heavily populated buildings.
Part F outlines the methods of ventilating as follows:
- Intermittent Fans – System 1
- Passive Stack – System 2
- MEV – System 3
- MVHR – System 4
- Alternative Means – this includes Positive Input Ventilation (PIV)
Whole house ventilation and extractor fans
Addressing poor indoor air quality is best achieved by taking a whole house ventilation approach. PIV units are considered an ‘Alternative Means’ of ventilation in Approved Document F when accompanied with a European certificate provided by a Technical Approval body. The document states: “Other ventilation systems and devices, perhaps following a different strategy (e.g. Positive Input Ventilation) may provide acceptable solutions, provided it can be demonstrated to the Building Control Body (e.g. by a BBA Certificate) that they meet Requirement F1.”
PIV systems are an enduring ventilation strategy that improves indoor air quality in homes. The installation of a PIV Unit within the home will both improve ventilation and lower humidity levels.
Extractor fans remain the most popular and well-tested method for removing moisture from the air. These can be installed throughout the home and are typically found in rooms that generate more moisture, such as kitchens, bathrooms, utility rooms and en suites (most of us our familiar with bathroom extractor fans). Making sure that intermittent extractor fans with background vents (usually trickle vents, a key feature of modern windows) are sufficiently located throughout the home will go a long way towards successfully meeting Approved Document F building regulation requirements.