Have you ever noticed that smell that consistently lingers in houses when they have not been occupied recently? Every property has its own unique stink, however they all begin to smell stagnant & stale when humans have not been residing there.
It’s a unquestionably distinct, nerve-wracking sensation when you walk into a new property & it smells abandoned.
I particularly hate how hastily this smell sets into my own home. I can be gone for 8 hours at work, & return it to find that the house has a choir that musty unoccupied smell. I cannot kneel it! I do not know why the air quality decreases so hastily while I’m gone, because I have the central heating & cooling system running most of the time. It seems like there should be enough airflow & ventilation to stir up the stagnant air & reduce the unusual stink. I’ve tried changing out my air filters many times, hoping that this would help to decrease the unfortunate stagnant smell, then however, nothing seems to work. I finally called up my local Heating & Air Conditioning serviceman & asked what I could do to improve the air quality in my home, starting with the smell. She suggested that I change up my central heating & cooling system by installing a return vent. This is a simple measure that pulls in as much air from the outside as it pumps out inside. This effectively replenishes your fresh air in the property as the high quality treated air circulates through your air ducts. Rather than breathing the same seasoned are day after day, you actively refresh the stagnant indoor air.It’s a simple upgrade procedure & my budget for this project is not unquestionably high. I’m on board. I’ll do anything to cut down on this empty property smell!