<p><i>Inside OUT: Human Health and the Air-Conditioning Era</i> focuses on the enclosed environment of fully conditioned buildings revealing a unique ecosystem with broad implications for human life and a rapidly expanding global footprint. Emphasizing the interconnections between buildings and human health equity and environmental sustainability it presents an interdisciplinary holistic analysis of the social behavioral and technological issues of indoor space.</p><p>Over the 20th century advances in mechanical conditioning technologies led to the dispersion and international dominance of the sealed building envelope which casually and progressively disconnected buildings and their occupants from local climatic biological and cultural environments. At the same time humans were increasingly pushed indoors by less tangible socially constructed forces that associated climate control with cleanliness health social status and modernization.</p><p>In this volume a multi-disciplinary group of experts on the indoor microbiome from the fields of biology anthropology and architecture come together to thoughtfully reflect on the history properties and meaning of indoor air quality in buildings and to discuss the future of human habitation – with a dominant focus on human health in a post-pandemic world. Taking a human-first approach to health and sustainability the authors weave together a compelling analysis of social and technological drivers of conditioned space with arguments for future interventions in the built environment.</p><p>Amid growing awareness of air quality and climate concerns <i>Inside OUT</i> provides a timely discussion of the relationship between building design and human health of relevance to professional and academic readers from across the spectrum of the building industry as well as fields including public health and environmental studies.</p>
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