Glenys M. Welsman
Realtor ® 1 - 902 - 225 - 4075


Royal LePage Atlantic 15 Dartmouth Road Suite 200 Bedford, NS B4A 3X6
902-835-2000
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" A Good Real Estate Agent Knows You're Not Just Buying A House, You're Moving Into A Community "
Indoor Air Quality is Important For Everyone
In recent years, the home building industry has worked closely with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) to gain insight into how the air quality in homes can affect our health and well-being. Today's new home buyers are reaping the rewards of this collaboration.
Canadians spend more than 90% of their time indoors, much of it at home. Research shows that the quality of indoor air can have significant health effects. The more than 20% of Canadians who suffer from allergies and asthma are especially sensitive to poor indoor air quality.
A home's air is affected by many things: off-gassing from building materials, finishes and furniture; dust; excessive moisture leading to mold growth; improper ventilation; and incomplete combustion in heating systems and other equipment.
Our daily activities have a big impact-moisture from cooking, bathing and laundering; gases from household cleaners and personal products; and so on. The air quality in your home is also affected by cigarette smoke; hair, dander and litter dust from pets; and pollutants from many types of hobbies. Even emissions from equipment in your home office can have an effect.
Today's new home builders take a systematic approach to clean indoor air. It begins by selecting the right building materials to reduce the amount of pollutants introduced into your home, such as low- or no-emission wood products, glues, grouts, paints and floor finishes. For instance, many new homes use hardwood or tile flooring in living and work areas, which are relatively easy to keep clean of such pollutants as dust and mold and can contribute less off-gassing.
The next step is ventilation. Every home needs a constant flow of fresh clean air from the outside to displace stale indoor air. In today's well-constructed and well-insulated homes, mechanical ventilation systems, such as a heat recovery ventilator (HRV), are built right into the structure of the house. In addition, all heating and cooling equipment, including fireplaces, draws combustion
air directly from the outside and is vented separately to eliminate the risk of indoor air contamination.
Talk with your builder if anyone in your family has special health concerns (i.e., allergies, asthma). Builders can take advantage of a whole range of special measures to ensure superior air quality, for instance by using wall plaster rather than drywall and milk paints instead of latex.
Whether or not you have special needs, today's new homes are built to give you the best possible indoor environment. That means clean fresh air, a comfortable moisture level, and no lingering odours. It's even nice to know that you can safely store belongings in your basement, knowing that they are not going to smell moldy after six months.
Check out the CHBA's Builder Directory for the names of professional builder members in your area. Also contact your local Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) office for more information about indoor air quality and the Healthy Housing Program, visit the CHMC Web site or call 1-800-668-2642. CMHC's publication Building Materials for the Environmentally Hypersensitive outlines many of the measures that can be taken to ensure superior air quality and is available by calling the toll-free number.
Finding the home that's right for you
Understanding specifications and options
Permits, inspections and quality
control
Indoor air quality is important for everyone
Good products make a quality home
Building products for a better environment
New Home Warranty protects your investment
Return to Real Estate Planning
Glenys has answers to your questions and more professional tips to make your real estate transaction more pleasurable.
Call or e-mail Glenys or click on "Ask Your Own Questions."
Glenys can send you information on any Property Listed For Sale on the Multiple Listing Service in the Halifax area. If you would like her to help you locate a home, please fill out her Information Request Form.
Surfing the Real Estate Board's web site or MLS.CA and found a house that you like but doesn't give you the civic address. Glenys can also help. Just fill out her Would like an address form, please !
Or perhaps you are considering selling your home in the near future, she can also offer you a Free No-Obligation Market Evaluation Form |
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