Mechanical ventilation
What mechanical ventilation means
Mechanical ventilation is any system that uses powered air movement to extract stale air, deliver fresh air, or balance both. It becomes important where natural cross-ventilation is unreliable, where internal wet loads are high, or where comfort expectations are higher than what openable windows alone can provide.
Why it matters in cost planning
Ventilation is not only an equipment cost. It changes ceiling coordination, penetrations, facade interfaces, service access, commissioning scope, and the number of systems that must work together at handover. A project that ignores ventilation early often pays later through mold risk, smell complaints, ceiling rework, or hurried add-on fan packages.
Typical solution levels
- `Exhaust only`: usually bathrooms, laundry, storage, or kitchen support zones.
- `Mixed fresh-air`: selected fresh-air routes plus local extract.
- `Balanced ERV/HRV`: controlled supply and extract with recovery, filters, and balancing.
What to verify on site
- Air is discharged to a valid outdoor location, not into voids or hidden facade pockets.
- Filter and fan access remain possible after ceilings and joinery are complete.
- Wet rooms, service rooms, and occupied spaces are matched to the intended strategy rather than treated as generic openings.
Why builders and investors care
For builders, ventilation is a coordination-heavy package that can trigger visible late rework. For investors, it directly affects comfort complaints, maintenance workload, and brand quality after handover.
Used in project stages
Explore in the product
- Engineering rough-in: Stage guide 路 Checklist 路 Mistakes and cost
- Engineering finishes: Stage guide 路 Checklist 路 Mistakes and cost
- Commissioning & testing: Stage guide 路 Checklist 路 Mistakes and cost
See also
Related cost packages
-
ST4-ENG-EXHAUST-007Mechanical exhaust rough-in -
ST4-ENG-FRESH-008Fresh-air / ERV rough-in -
ST9-ENG-VENT-008Grilles, diffusers & ventilation controls
FAQ
Natural ventilation is often not enough in enclosed bathrooms, laundry rooms, deep-plan bedrooms, high-humidity tropical sites, or premium projects that need predictable indoor air quality regardless of wind conditions.
No. The simplest level is local exhaust only. ERV or HRV sits at the more complex end of the range and adds supply air, recovery, filters, balancing, and more commissioning work.