Updated
Updated · University of Colorado Boulder · May 12
CU Boulder Study Links 15 COVID-19 Cases to Shared Ventilation in 7-Story Spain Building
Updated
Updated · University of Colorado Boulder · May 12

CU Boulder Study Links 15 COVID-19 Cases to Shared Ventilation in 7-Story Spain Building

6 articles · Updated · University of Colorado Boulder · May 12
  • Fifteen COVID-19 infections across four vertically stacked apartments in a Santander building were most plausibly transmitted through shared bathroom ventilation, according to a PLOS One study published May 12.
  • Airflow tests, CO2 measurements in a vacant unit and genetic sequencing of residents’ samples pointed to virus movement between apartments without face-to-face contact.
  • The 1969 building used a natural-convection shaft system; the study found hot weather could reverse airflow, while a kitchen exhaust hood could pull air from a neighboring bathroom within minutes.
  • Researchers said similar risks can persist in older buildings worldwide, citing Hong Kong’s 2003 SARS outbreak that infected 321 people and killed 42 through shared building airflow.
  • The authors urged Spain to retrofit older buildings with backdraft-preventing fans and stronger ventilation standards, while recommending air purifiers and better indoor-air design more broadly.
Is your apartment's shared ventilation system secretly a highway for viruses from your neighbors?
Who is responsible for fixing the hidden ventilation dangers that allow viruses to travel between apartments?

COVID-19’s Secret Route: The Critical Role of Shared Ventilation in Building-to-Building Viral Spread

Overview

A groundbreaking study from the University of Colorado Boulder, inspired by a 2020 COVID-19 outbreak in Santander, Spain, revealed a hidden way the virus can spread in buildings. Researchers found that COVID-19 could move between apartments through shared ventilation systems, even when residents never met. The study focused on a seven-story building with a 'stack effect' ventilation system, a design common in older Spanish buildings. This discovery highlights that airborne viruses can travel through connected air systems, showing a major risk in many older buildings and urging a rethinking of how we manage indoor air and ventilation.

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