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RE: What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

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Yes, especially our won bodies where 90 per cent of the cells carried by our skeleton are microbes. And my elbow and your elbow have a more similar microbes

than my elbow and my armpit.

From: iequality [mailto:iequality ]

On Behalf Of Sepp

Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 1:15 AM

To: IEQ

Subject: What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

Another take on indoor environments...

What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

A growing movement argues it's time to rethink our assumptions about what an environment is and give our the indoors the same scrutiny we give nature.

....

Microbiologists are now teaming up with architects, engineers, and indoor air researchers to start to better understand the ecosystems that surround us every day, and whose contents are largely invisible to the eye.

The " indoor ecology'' movement is a fairly young phenomenon, but it is already starting to yield a picture that's surprisingly intricate and diverse: A cubic centimeter of indoor air contains a thousand tiny pieces of solid or liquid material;

a similar volume of house dust is a landscape of fibers, pollen, skin, and hair. Besides ourselves, and our pets, and our plants, this crowded environment is home to an ecosystem of microbial life — bacteria, fungi, viruses —- that float freely or form tightly

knit communities on surfaces and objects. And their lives are shaped by building materials, furniture, and the indoor climate — light, moisture, temperature, and the movements of air.

" We know so little about this system as a complex ecosystem,'' says Hal Levin, a research architect with the Building Ecology Research Group in California, who argues that we should see buildings not as static objects, but dynamic environments

that change over time.

....

Increasingly, scientists are realizing that microbial communities are just as rich in the built environment as they are outdoors. The concept has gotten a boost from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which over the past few years has devoted more than $20 million

to fund dozens of studies on microbes in the indoor environment.

....

http://www.mnn.com/health/healthy-spaces/stories/what-if-we-studied-the-indoors-as-an-environment-all-its-own

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Alice, There was a recent TED lecture on this subject. We are going to also discuss this in our upcoming 30 minute video documentary that we plan to show at IAQA in Las Vegas in March."Mutant Molds in Outer Space"It deals with the subject of mold growth in closed(sealed) environments.The first cut of this video documentary is really great. Some younger people may not get all the homages though. :)BobYes, especially our won bodies where 90 per cent of the cells carried by our skeleton are microbes. And my elbow and your elbow have a more similar microbes than my elbow and my armpit. From: iequality [mailto:iequality ] On Behalf Of SeppSent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 1:15 AMTo: IEQSubject: What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own? Another take on indoor environments... What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?A growing movement argues it's time to rethink our assumptions about what an environment is and give our the indoors the same scrutiny we give nature....Microbiologists are now teaming up with architects, engineers, and indoor air researchers to start to better understand the ecosystems that surround us every day, and whose contents are largely invisible to the eye. The "indoor ecology'' movement is a fairly young phenomenon, but it is already starting to yield a picture that's surprisingly intricate and diverse: A cubic centimeter of indoor air contains a thousand tiny pieces of solid or liquid material; a similar volume of house dust is a landscape of fibers, pollen, skin, and hair. Besides ourselves, and our pets, and our plants, this crowded environment is home to an ecosystem of microbial life — bacteria, fungi, viruses —- that float freely or form tightly knit communities on surfaces and objects. And their lives are shaped by building materials, furniture, and the indoor climate — light, moisture, temperature, and the movements of air. "We know so little about this system as a complex ecosystem,'' says Hal Levin, a research architect with the Building Ecology Research Group in California, who argues that we should see buildings not as static objects, but dynamic environments that change over time....Increasingly, scientists are realizing that microbial communities are just as rich in the built environment as they are outdoors. The concept has gotten a boost from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which over the past few years has devoted more than $20 million to fund dozens of studies on microbes in the indoor environment....http://www.mnn.com/health/healthy-spaces/stories/what-if-we-studied-the-indoors-as-an-environment-all-its-own<~WRD022.jpg>

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Thanks for the heads up. I’ll definitely check-out the TED lecture. Video you are working on sounds great.

From: iequality [mailto:iequality ]

On Behalf Of Bob s

Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 5:56 PM

To: iequality

Subject: Re: What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

Alice,

There was a recent TED lecture on this subject.

We are going to also discuss this in our upcoming 30 minute video documentary that we plan to show at IAQA in Las Vegas in March.

" Mutant Molds in Outer Space "

It deals with the subject of mold growth in closed(sealed) environments.

The first cut of this video documentary is really great. Some younger people may not get all the homages though. :)

Bob

Yes, especially our won bodies where 90 per cent of the cells carried by our skeleton are microbes. And my elbow and your elbow have a more similar microbes

than my elbow and my armpit.

From: iequality [mailto:iequality ] On

Behalf Of Sepp

Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 1:15 AM

To: IEQ

Subject: What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

Another take on indoor environments...

What if we studied the indoors as an environment all its own?

A growing movement argues it's time to rethink our assumptions about what an environment is and give our the indoors the same scrutiny we give nature.

....

Microbiologists are now teaming up with architects, engineers, and indoor air researchers to start to better understand the ecosystems that surround us every day, and whose contents are largely invisible to the eye.

The " indoor ecology'' movement is a fairly young phenomenon, but it is already starting to yield a picture that's surprisingly intricate and diverse: A cubic centimeter of indoor air contains a thousand tiny pieces of solid or liquid material;

a similar volume of house dust is a landscape of fibers, pollen, skin, and hair. Besides ourselves, and our pets, and our plants, this crowded environment is home to an ecosystem of microbial life — bacteria, fungi, viruses —- that float freely or form tightly

knit communities on surfaces and objects. And their lives are shaped by building materials, furniture, and the indoor climate — light, moisture, temperature, and the movements of air.

" We know so little about this system as a complex ecosystem,'' says Hal Levin, a research architect with the Building Ecology Research Group in California, who argues that we should see buildings not as static objects, but dynamic environments

that change over time.

....

Increasingly, scientists are realizing that microbial communities are just as rich in the built environment as they are outdoors. The concept has gotten a boost from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which over the past few years has devoted more than $20 million

to fund dozens of studies on microbes in the indoor environment.

....

http://www.mnn.com/health/healthy-spaces/stories/what-if-we-studied-the-indoors-as-an-environment-all-its-own

<~WRD022.jpg>

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