Table of Contents
ASHRAE 62.1 Ventilation Standard Guide
What Are the ASHRAE Ventilation Standards?
ASHRAE (American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers) publishes the most widely referenced ventilation standards in North America and globally. The key standards are:
| Standard | Application | Scope |
|---|---|---|
| ASHRAE 62.1 | Commercial buildings | Offices, retail, schools, hospitals |
| ASHRAE 62.2 | Residential buildings | Single-family, low-rise multifamily |
| ASHRAE 170 | Healthcare facilities | Hospitals, clinics, labs |
| ASHRAE Fundamentals | Reference handbook | Design data, calculations |
This guide focuses on ASHRAE 62.1 as it covers most commercial HVAC applications.
How Do You Comply with ASHRAE 62.1?
ASHRAE 62.1 offers two compliance paths:
1. Ventilation Rate Procedure (VRP)
The prescriptive method specifying minimum outdoor air rates based on:
- Occupancy (people)
- Floor area (square feet or meters)
- Space type (office, classroom, restaurant, etc.)
2. Indoor Air Quality Procedure (IAQP)
A performance-based method that:
- Identifies contaminants of concern
- Sets acceptable concentration limits
- Designs ventilation to maintain those limits
- Requires ongoing monitoring
Most projects use the Ventilation Rate Procedure due to its straightforward calculations.
How Do You Calculate Ventilation Rates per ASHRAE?
Step 1: Breathing Zone Outdoor Air
Calculate the breathing zone outdoor airflow for each zone:
Where:
- = Breathing zone outdoor airflow (cfm or L/s)
- = Outdoor airflow rate per person (from Table 6.2.2.1)
- = Zone population (number of people)
- = Outdoor airflow rate per unit area (from Table 6.2.2.1)
- = Zone floor area (ft2 or m2)
Common Ventilation Rates (Table 6.2.2.1)
| Space Type | Rp (cfm/person) | Ra (cfm/ft2) | Occupancy Density |
|---|---|---|---|
| Office space | 5 | 0.06 | 5 people/1000 ft2 |
| Conference room | 5 | 0.06 | 50 people/1000 ft2 |
| Classroom | 10 | 0.12 | 35 people/1000 ft2 |
| Restaurant dining | 7.5 | 0.18 | 70 people/1000 ft2 |
| Gymnasium | 20 | 0.18 | 30 people/1000 ft2 |
| Retail sales | 7.5 | 0.12 | 15 people/1000 ft2 |
Quick Example: A 5,000 ft2 office with 25 occupants needs: Vbz = (5 cfm/person × 25) + (0.06 cfm/ft2 × 5,000 ft2) = 125 + 300 = 425 cfm
Step 2: Zone Air Distribution Effectiveness
Adjust for how well air reaches the breathing zone:
Where:
- = Zone outdoor airflow
- = Zone air distribution effectiveness
Zone Air Distribution Effectiveness Values
| Air Distribution Configuration | Ez (Heating) | Ez (Cooling) |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling supply, ceiling return | 1.0 | 1.0 |
| Ceiling supply, floor return | 1.0 | 1.0 |
| Floor supply, ceiling return (stratified) | 1.0 | 1.2 |
| Floor supply, floor return | 1.0 | 0.7 |
| Makeup air drawn through space | 0.8 | 0.8 |
Step 3: Multiple Zone Systems
For systems serving multiple zones, calculate system ventilation efficiency:
Where:
- = Outdoor air fraction in primary air
- = Maximum zone primary outdoor air fraction
Then:
Demand Controlled Ventilation (DCV)
DCV reduces energy use by modulating outdoor air based on actual occupancy.
When DCV is Required/Permitted
ASHRAE 62.1 permits DCV when:
- Occupancy varies significantly
- Design occupancy exceeds 25 people per 1000 ft2
- Space has CO2 sensors or occupancy counting
CO2-Based DCV
CO2 concentration indicates occupancy levels:
Rule of thumb: Maintain indoor CO2 at 700-1000 ppm above outdoor levels (typically outdoor is 400-450 ppm).
DCV should not reduce outdoor air below the area-based component (Ra × Az). People may leave, but the building still needs ventilation for material emissions.
ASHRAE 62.2 for Residential
For low-rise residential (3 stories or less):
Where:
- = Total ventilation rate (cfm)
- = Floor area (ft2)
- = Number of bedrooms
Example
A 2,000 ft2 home with 3 bedrooms:
ASHRAE Fundamentals Handbook
The Fundamentals Handbook provides supporting data for ventilation design:
Chapter 16: Ventilation and Infiltration
- Natural ventilation calculations
- Stack effect and wind pressure
- Air leakage characteristics
Chapter 21: Duct Design
- Friction charts and tables
- Fitting loss coefficients
- Equal friction method
Chapter 25: Thermal Comfort
- PMV/PPD calculations
- Operative temperature
- Air velocity effects
Common Design Mistakes
- Using only per-person rates - ASHRAE 62.1 requires both Rp AND Ra components
- Ignoring distribution effectiveness - Ez can significantly impact outdoor air
- Not accounting for system efficiency - Multiple zone systems need Ev calculation
- Oversizing for DCV savings - DCV reduces energy, not equipment size
- Ignoring exhaust requirements - Some spaces have minimum exhaust (restrooms, kitchens)
Using the Calculator
Our Fresh Air Flow Calculator implements ASHRAE 62.1:
We calculate these values using the formulas specified in the referenced standards.
- Select space type from dropdown
- Enter floor area and occupancy
- Choose air distribution method
- Get breathing zone and zone outdoor airflow
The calculator handles unit conversions and provides results in both cfm and L/s.
Our analysis methodology is based on established engineering principles.
PDF Export — Create printable reports with all calculation details for project documentation.
Calculations follow ASHRAE 62.1 ventilation standards and EN 13779 guidelines.
Summary
ASHRAE ventilation standards ensure adequate indoor air quality:
- 62.1 covers commercial buildings with the Ventilation Rate Procedure
- Calculate for each zone
- Adjust for zone air distribution effectiveness ()
- Use system ventilation efficiency () for multiple zone systems
- 62.2 covers residential with simpler calculations
- DCV reduces energy by modulating outdoor air with occupancy
For calculations, use our Fresh Air Flow Calculator which implements ASHRAE 62.1 methodology.