Total Fire Protection

Ventilating a Garage to Keep Your Customers from Getting Sick

The odds are high that the indoor air quality is worse in a home with an attached garage than in a home without one. Just take a look at the photo here to see some of the potential sources of pollutants that can get into your home’s air. How many do you see?

Even without zooming in, I can spot five potential significant sources. The car is the biggest, of course. Every time it drives in or out, exhaust, including carbon monoxide, from the tailpipe enters the garage. On the left you can see a lawn mower and next to it a gasoline container. In the back is a gas water heater (in this case a direct vent type, which is a safer model than the standard natural draft type). To the left of the water heater are shelves full of various things, which may well include pesticides, fertilizers, and other stuff that fills the garage air with things you don’t want to breathe.

Isolating the garage

So the typical garage has a lot of bad stuff in it. You may not notice the smell in your own garage because you grow used to it after a while, but I often notice a toxic odor in garages. What can you do to keep that stuff out of the air in your home? The first step, of course, is to isolate the garage from the house as well as possible. Here are the first steps to keeping the garage air out of the house:

Ventilating the garage

There’s another thing you can do to keep that garage out of the house, too. Ventilate! With an exhaust fan in the garage, you can do two things to improve your indoor air quality. First, when the fan runs, it removes pollutants from the garage air and sends them outdoors.

Second, the exhaust fan puts the garage under a negative pressure. That way, when you open the door between the garage and the house, air is more likely to flow from the house to the garage rather than from the garage to the house.

Controlling the garage ventilation

You’ve got a few options here. You could set it up to run continuously, of course. If you’ve got a lot of nasty, offgassing stuff out there and you really don’t want to get rid of it…well, my question to you is why the heck not? Build a shed out back. If you’ve already got a shed that’s stuffed to the gills, you could do like Arthur “Two Sheds” Jackson and think of getting a second one.

Rather than running the garage exhaust fan continuously, you could install a switch in the garage and control it manually. That’s not a great solution, though, because it often won’t be running at the time you need it to run. Say you drive into the garage, the overhead door closes behind you. You’ve trapped some pollutants in the air but you have to get out of the car and turn the fan on before it starts removing them.

The best solution, in my opinion, is to use a controller like AirCycler’s GarageVent. When you install it, sensors wired into the doors will turn the exhaust fan on whenever a door to the garage is opened. Then the fan runs for a set amount of time (0 to 2 hours) after you close the door. You can also set it to run based on temperature. Check it out.

And how much should you ventilate? Great question. I just found out at the ASHRAE 62.2 meeting this week that they’re doing a research project on garage ventilation. These aren’t official results yet, but what they said is that 50 cfm is probably too low and 200 cfm has worked every time. Stay tuned for the final results on that study, but I think 200 cfm is about the right number.

Complicating factors

Having said all that, installing a garage exhaust fan may or may not solve the problems. Here are some things that might negate or reduce the effectiveness of your fan, or even cause more problems.

As always, the devil’s in the details so make sure you either understand what’s going on and can measure the effect of a garage exhaust fan or you hire a pro who does and can.

Now, where do you think you’ll put that second shed?

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