
Healthier air for your home and workplace
Indoor air quality in New York City presents a unique and often underestimated challenge. NYC residents spend the vast majority of their time indoors, and the air inside apartments, offices, and commercial spaces can be two to five times more polluted than the outdoor air—even accounting for the city's vehicle emissions and construction dust. Contributing factors are plentiful: NYC's dense construction means buildings are often located near highways, construction sites, and industrial facilities. Older buildings may contain lead paint dust, asbestos fibers from deteriorating insulation, and mold growth from decades of moisture exposure. Newer buildings built to tight energy codes can trap indoor pollutants by limiting fresh air exchange. Cooking fumes, cleaning chemicals, off-gassing from furniture and building materials, and pet dander all accumulate indoors. NYC's high asthma rates—particularly in the Bronx, which has among the highest childhood asthma rates in the nation—underscore the real health impact of poor indoor air quality. Our indoor air quality services begin with comprehensive testing to identify exactly what is in your air: particulate matter, volatile organic compounds, carbon dioxide levels (an indicator of ventilation adequacy), mold spore counts, and humidity levels. Based on the results, we recommend targeted solutions that may include improved filtration, air purification systems, ventilation upgrades, humidity control, or duct cleaning. Every building is different, and we design solutions based on your specific test results rather than selling one-size-fits-all products. For building managers and employers, maintaining good indoor air quality is increasingly recognized as essential for tenant satisfaction, employee productivity, and compliance with NYC's indoor air quality guidelines.
Comprehensive indoor air quality testing for particulates, VOCs, CO2, humidity, and mold
Analysis of test results and identification of specific air quality problems
Customized solution recommendations based on your results and building type
Installation of recommended equipment—filtration, purification, ventilation, or humidity control
Follow-up testing to verify improvement and ongoing monitoring if desired
Typical cost for Indoor Air Quality in NYC: $200 - $1,500. Actual cost depends on your building type, system size, and complexity. Get a free estimate for your specific situation.
Pre war apartment: Pre-war buildings face IAQ challenges including lead paint dust, poor ventilation from sealed windows, and mold from aging plumbing. Testing identifies the specific issues so solutions can be targeted.
High rise condo: High-rise IAQ is influenced by building ventilation systems, neighboring units, and proximity to traffic. We test individual units and recommend solutions including HEPA filtration and ERV systems.
Brownstone: Brownstones can accumulate IAQ problems from basement moisture, old paint, and inadequate ventilation on upper floors. Whole-house solutions often combine ventilation improvements with air purification.
Commercial building: Commercial IAQ directly impacts employee health and productivity. We provide testing, solutions, and documentation that helps meet WELL Building standards and tenant expectations.
"Our building's boiler died on the coldest night of the year and these guys had a technician at our door within an hour. He diagnosed the problem, had the part on his truck, and had us back up and running before midnight. Saved our entire building from a miserable night."
"Had three Mitsubishi mini-splits installed in our Park Slope brownstone. The team was incredibly professional — they protected our floors, ran the lines neatly through the walls, and left the place cleaner than they found it. The units are whisper quiet and our first summer electric bill was actually lower than when we had window units."
"We manage 12 buildings in the Bronx and have been using this company for all our HVAC maintenance for three years. They keep our boilers running, handle all the DOB inspections, and their emergency response has been reliable every single time. Having one company that knows all our buildings has simplified our operations enormously."
Key steps include: using a high-quality air purifier with HEPA filtration, ensuring your HVAC system has clean filters (MERV 11 or higher recommended), maintaining proper ventilation by running exhaust fans in kitchens and bathrooms, controlling humidity between 30-50%, having your ducts cleaned every 3-5 years, adding houseplants that help filter air, and using low-VOC paints and cleaning products. NYC's outdoor air quality makes indoor filtration particularly important.
The ideal indoor humidity level is 30-50%. In NYC's humid summers, humidity can climb well above 60% indoors, promoting mold growth and dust mites. In winter, heated indoor air often drops below 25% humidity, causing dry skin, respiratory irritation, and static electricity. Use a dehumidifier or your AC in summer and a humidifier in winter to maintain the ideal range. Whole-home humidifiers and dehumidifiers can be integrated with your HVAC system.
HVAC filters and standalone air purifiers serve different purposes. HVAC filters clean air as it circulates through the system, but they only work when the system is running. Air purifiers run continuously in a specific room and can capture smaller particles. For NYC residents, especially those near busy streets or construction, using both provides the best protection. HEPA air purifiers are particularly effective for allergens, fine particulate matter, and biological contaminants.
For most NYC residential HVAC systems, a MERV 11 filter provides a good balance of air quality improvement and airflow. MERV 13 filters capture even smaller particles including some bacteria and virus-carrying droplets, and are recommended by the CDC for improved protection against airborne illness. However, high-MERV filters increase airflow resistance, so verify with your HVAC technician that your system can handle the higher rating without reducing performance.
Signs of mold in your HVAC system include a musty or earthy smell when the system runs, visible mold on vents, registers, or inside ductwork, increased allergy symptoms when the HVAC is operating, and condensation or moisture around HVAC components. Mold thrives in the cool, damp environment of evaporator coils and condensate drain pans. If you suspect mold, have a professional inspection performed — mold in HVAC systems should be remediated by qualified professionals.
Yes, HVAC systems that draw in outdoor air for ventilation can introduce NYC's outdoor pollutants including particulate matter from traffic, construction dust, and other contaminants. However, properly filtered HVAC systems also help clean indoor air. Using appropriate filters (MERV 11 or higher) on your HVAC system helps capture outdoor pollutants before they circulate indoors. Energy recovery ventilators (ERVs) provide fresh air while filtering incoming outdoor air.
An Energy Recovery Ventilator (ERV) brings fresh outdoor air into your home while exhausting stale indoor air, and it transfers heat and moisture between the two airstreams to minimize energy loss. ERVs are particularly useful in well-sealed NYC apartments that may not get adequate fresh air, in buildings where opening windows brings in excessive noise or pollution, and where code requires mechanical ventilation. They improve air quality while maintaining energy efficiency.
Carbon monoxide is a serious concern with any gas-fired HVAC equipment including furnaces, boilers, and gas water heaters. CO is produced by incomplete combustion and can be deadly in enclosed spaces. Cracked heat exchangers, blocked flues, and improper venting are common causes of CO leaks from HVAC equipment. NYC law requires CO detectors in all homes with fossil fuel appliances. Annual HVAC maintenance includes combustion safety testing that helps prevent CO issues.
UV-C germicidal lights installed in HVAC systems kill or deactivate biological contaminants including mold, bacteria, and viruses as air passes over the UV lamp. Coil-mounted UV lights keep the evaporator coil free of mold growth, while air-stream UV lights treat the air as it flows through the duct. UV systems are a supplemental air quality measure that works alongside filtration, not as a replacement. They are most effective in combination with proper filtration and ventilation.
NYC apartments are notoriously dusty due to several factors: high outdoor particulate levels from traffic and construction, older buildings with poor sealing allowing outdoor air infiltration, steam heating systems that circulate dry air (picking up and distributing dust), high-rise buildings with strong stack effect pulling in outdoor air, and proximity to busy streets. Improving filtration on your HVAC system, sealing air leaks, using HEPA air purifiers, and regular duct cleaning can all help reduce dust levels.
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