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VDI 2089 Pool Ventilation Standard Guide

Complete guide to VDI 2089 German standard for indoor swimming pool ventilation. Learn humidity control, air distribution, and evaporation rate calculations for natatoriums.

Thomas Keller, Dipl.-Ing.
Thomas Keller is a Diplom-Ingenieur with 20+ years of experience in swimming pool facility design across Europe. He specializes in VDI standards implementation and has designed ventilation systems for Olympic-class natatoriums. Thomas is an active member of VDI-Gesellschaft Bauen und Gebaudetechnik.
Reviewed by VDI-Certified HVAC Engineers
Published: January 8, 2025
Updated: January 21, 2026
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VDI 2089 Standard: Swimming Pool Ventilation Guide

What is VDI 2089?

VDI 2089 is the authoritative German engineering standard for designing ventilation systems in indoor swimming pools and natatoriums. Published by the Verein Deutscher Ingenieure (Association of German Engineers), this standard provides comprehensive guidance on:

  • Evaporation rate calculations based on water temperature, air conditions, and activity levels
  • Air volume determination to handle moisture loads
  • Humidity control strategies to prevent condensation
  • Air distribution patterns for optimal comfort and efficiency
  • Energy recovery from exhaust air

The standard is widely referenced beyond Germany and serves as a benchmark for pool ventilation design worldwide.


Why Does VDI 2089 Matter for Pool Design?

Indoor swimming pools present unique HVAC challenges:

  1. High moisture loads - Evaporation from the water surface creates significant humidity
  2. Corrosive environment - Chloramines and high humidity damage building materials
  3. Condensation risk - Cold surfaces can cause structural damage
  4. Air quality - Swimmers need fresh air and chloramine dilution
  5. Energy intensity - Pool facilities are major energy consumers

VDI 2089 addresses all these challenges with engineering calculations backed by decades of research.


How Do You Calculate Pool Ventilation per VDI 2089?

Evaporation Rate Formula

The fundamental equation for pool evaporation per VDI 2089:

W=(a+b×v)×A×(pwpL)W = (a + b \times v) \times A \times (p_w - p_L)

Where:

  • WW = Evaporation rate (kg/h)
  • a,ba, b = Coefficients based on activity level
  • vv = Air velocity over water surface (m/s)
  • AA = Water surface area (m2)
  • pwp_w = Saturation pressure at water temperature (mbar)
  • pLp_L = Partial pressure at room conditions (mbar)

Activity Coefficients

Pool TypeCoefficient aCoefficient b
Private/Hotel pool (still water)0.0060.0045
Public pool (moderate activity)0.0100.0060
Wave pool/Water park0.0140.0080
Competitive swimming0.0080.0055

Required Air Volume

Once evaporation rate is known, calculate the required air volume:

V=W(ρ×Δx)V = \frac{W}{(\rho \times \Delta x)}

Where:

  • VV = Air volume (m3/h)
  • WW = Evaporation rate (kg/h)
  • ρ\rho = Air density (kg/m3)
  • Δx\Delta x = Humidity ratio difference between supply and return (kg/kg)

Design Parameters

Temperature and Humidity

ParameterRecommended Value
Water temperature26-28 degrees C (competition: 25-26 degrees C)
Room temperatureWater temp + 2 to 3 degrees C
Relative humidity50-65%
Supply air tempAbove dew point + 2-3 degrees C

Air Distribution

Supply air strategies:

  • Displacement ventilation: Low-level supply at 0.3-0.5 m/s
  • Mixed ventilation: High sidewall jets with throw calculation
  • Underfloor supply: Best for spectator areas

Return air location:

  • Near ceiling to capture rising warm, moist air
  • Along pool perimeter for glazed walls (prevents condensation)
  • Minimum 2/3 of exhaust at ceiling level

Pressure Relationships

ZonePressure (relative to outdoors)
Pool hall-10 to -20 Pa
Changing rooms-5 to -10 Pa
Entrance/lobbyReference (0 Pa)

The negative pressure in the pool hall prevents chloramine odors from migrating to other building areas.


Energy Recovery

VDI 2089 emphasizes energy efficiency through:

  1. Heat recovery from exhaust air - Plate or rotary heat exchangers can recover 50-70% of sensible heat
  2. Dehumidification heat - Condensation energy can preheat pool water
  3. Solar gains - Properly designed glazing reduces heating loads
  4. Night setback - Reduced ventilation when pool is unoccupied

Comparison: VDI 2089 vs ASHRAE

AspectVDI 2089ASHRAE 62.1/Applications Handbook
Evaporation calculationDetailed activity factorsSimplified approach
Humidity control50-65% RH mandatory50-60% RH recommended
Air distributionSpecific guidanceGeneral principles
Energy recoveryStrongly emphasizedRecommended
DocumentationComprehensive formulaeReference to manufacturers

Both standards achieve similar results, but VDI 2089 provides more prescriptive calculation methods.


Common Design Mistakes

  1. Undersizing for peak loads - Not accounting for wave pools or high activity
  2. Ignoring spectator areas - Different comfort requirements than pool deck
  3. Poor air distribution - Short-circuiting between supply and return
  4. Inadequate pressure control - Odor migration to other building areas
  5. No condensation prevention - Damage to glazing and structural elements

Using the Calculator

Our Pool Ventilation Calculator implements VDI 2089 methodology:

We calculate these values using the formulas specified in the referenced standards.

  1. Enter pool dimensions and water temperature
  2. Select activity level (private, public, wave pool)
  3. Specify room conditions
  4. Get evaporation rate and required air volume

The calculator handles unit conversions and provides results in both metric and imperial units.

Our analysis methodology is based on established engineering principles.

Download as PDF — Save your calculation results for documentation and professional reporting.


Calculations follow ASHRAE 62.1 ventilation standards and EN 13779 guidelines.

Summary

VDI 2089 provides a rigorous engineering framework for indoor pool ventilation design. Key takeaways:

  • Calculate evaporation using the activity-adjusted formula
  • Size air systems for moisture removal, not just occupancy
  • Control humidity at 50-65% RH to prevent condensation
  • Distribute air with low supply and high return
  • Maintain negative pressure in the pool hall
  • Recover energy from exhaust air

For detailed calculations, use our Pool Ventilation Calculator which implements VDI 2089 methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions

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