Marvinius II
2018-01-06 13:08:30
- #1
The questioner has not yet commented on the size of the respective rooms. Maybe they could also sleep in the storage room and the previous bedroom becomes the storage room....I wouldn't want to completely rule it out, but as I already said, without knowing where the rooms are located AND what volume exchange is being used, it's hard to assess. Only one thing: a controlled residential ventilation system is not a kitchen extractor hood, meaning the volume flow is very low, especially in a storage room where rather a low air exchange will be set. If the entire volume of the storage room is exchanged two to four times per day (which should be enough for such a room) and mixes through the overflow area with all surrounding rooms, I would assume that the OLF concentration drops quite quickly. If the storage room directly adjoins the bedroom and is the only one overflowing into the bedroom, I would consider that more likely. For me, there are simply too many uncertainties...
And I'm not saying that this would be acceptable from a planning perspective or that it wouldn't represent a defect. I was just trying to ease the OP's panic a bit, instead of spreading hysteria [emoji6]
And if the OP actually perceives an onion smell in the bedroom at some point, they will have to adjust the use of the storage room accordingly. But that does not make the house unusable or uninhabitable. It's still annoying though, because something else was ordered. Speaking of annoying, luckily there was nothing said about the WC... [emoji6]