psulee
Mechanical
- Dec 10, 2007
- 11
I am looking for some guidance on a disagreement that I am having with another engineer regarding the design of a ventilation system for a new residence hall. The residence hall is subject to both the IMC and ASHRAE 62-2004 ventilation requirements. The building is designed with a suite approach (3-4 bedrooms, 1 common space, 1 shared bathroom). The engineer would like to supply all the fresh air into the corridor and let the corridor transport the air to the bedrooms. Without a return or exhaust air path at the bedroom, this was not possible. But my question is: can the engineer use the corridor as the delivery method to the occupied spaces? I have found in the noted compliance documents where it indicates that transfer air may be used in lieu of direct OA supply (bathrooms/kithenettes). But I did not find a statement indicating that the supply air for the occupied spaces must be supplied directly. The engineer is proceeding to design a system that will pull air from the corridor, through the common space, and into the bedrooms. I am uncomfortable with this direction and would like to reference a specific requirement indicating that this solution is not acceptable. I would also be interested to hear those that disagree allowing me to put this to rest. (Note that the design had originally intended to use the windows to comply with the OA requirement, but the window could not accomodate minimum openning). Thank you.