National Air Quality Authority
The HVAC Systems Provider Network on this site catalogues heating, ventilation, and air conditioning resources with a focus on indoor air quality implications — spanning regulatory standards, filtration technologies, ventilation frameworks, and facility-specific applications. Providers are organized to support engineers, facility managers, building officials, and researchers who need structured access to topic-specific reference material. The provider network operates within the regulatory landscape shaped by agencies including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and standards bodies such as ASHRAE, whose Standard 62.1 establishes minimum ventilation rates for acceptable indoor air quality in commercial and institutional buildings. Understanding what this provider network contains — and what it deliberately excludes — is essential for interpreting its structure correctly.
How the provider network is maintained
Providers within the network are organized by topic cluster, not by vendor, product brand, or commercial category. Each entry maps to a defined subject area within the HVAC–air quality domain, and placement decisions follow a classification framework anchored to four primary node types:
- Regulatory and standards references — entries covering agency guidance (EPA, OSHA, CDC) and consensus standards (ASHRAE, ACGIH, NFPA) that govern HVAC design, operation, and indoor environmental quality.
- Technology and system-type pages — entries addressing specific equipment categories such as MERV-rated filtration, HEPA systems, energy recovery ventilators, and UV air purification.
- Pollutant and contaminant pages — entries tied to specific airborne hazards including particulate matter, volatile organic compounds, carbon monoxide, radon, and biological agents such as mold.
- Facility and application context pages — entries scoped to building type (residential, commercial, schools, healthcare) or operational scenario (wildfire smoke events, infectious disease mitigation, humidity control).
Classification boundaries are maintained so that a given provider appears under one primary node type, even when the subject material overlaps categories. For example, carbon monoxide in HVAC systems is classified under pollutant/contaminant rather than under equipment type, because the primary reference purpose is hazard identification, not equipment specification. ASHRAE 62.1 (2022 edition) and ASHRAE 55 (thermal environmental conditions, 2023 edition) are referenced across multiple provider entries but are not duplicated as separate entries for each context in which they appear.
Updates to providers follow a structured review cycle tied to formal revision events: when ASHRAE publishes an addendum to Standard 62.1, when the EPA revises its indoor air quality guidelines, or when a major code body such as the International Mechanical Code (IMC) releases a new edition. Provider entries that reference superseded standards are flagged for revision rather than removed, because historical regulatory context retains research value.
What the provider network does not cover
The provider network is scoped to HVAC systems as they relate to indoor air quality. It does not function as a contractor locator, a product comparison engine, or a purchasing guide. Providers do not include brand-specific equipment reviews, regional contractor networks, or utility rebate programs.
The provider network also does not cover HVAC topics where the primary relevance is thermal comfort or energy efficiency independent of air quality — for instance, refrigerant charge optimization, boiler combustion efficiency, or building envelope insulation performance are outside scope unless those factors directly affect indoor contaminant levels or ventilation adequacy.
Permitting and inspection content within the network is limited to conceptual framing. The IMC, administered locally by Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) offices across the United States, governs mechanical permit requirements for HVAC installation and modification. Specific permit fee schedules, local amendment tables, and AHJ contact information are not maintained here — those details change at the jurisdiction level and require direct verification with local building departments. The provider network references permitting concepts (e.g., the requirement for inspected ductwork under IMC Chapter 6) without substituting for local code research.
Safety classifications referenced in providers align with named standards: NFPA 90A (installation of air-conditioning and ventilating systems) and NFPA 90B (installation of warm air heating and air-conditioning systems) establish risk categories used when describing equipment installation safety framing. Providers do not assign safety ratings to specific products.
Relationship to other network resources
The provider network serves as a structured access layer to deeper reference material. The HVAC air quality standards overview provides the regulatory baseline that contextualizes why providers are organized as they are — particularly the ASHRAE and EPA frameworks that govern acceptable indoor air quality thresholds. Readers orienting to this resource for the first time may benefit from reviewing how to use this HVAC systems resource, which explains navigational conventions and provider format conventions in detail.
Topic pages such as indoor air quality pollutants and HVAC systems and HVAC system types and air quality comparison are reference articles rather than provider network providers — they provide explanatory depth that provider network entries link to but do not replicate. The distinction matters: a provider network entry identifies and categorizes a subject; a topic page explains mechanisms, compares variants, and presents structured technical detail.
How to interpret providers
Each provider entry in the HVAC systems providers index follows a consistent structure:
- Subject heading — the topic name as used in the relevant regulatory or technical literature
- Classification node — one of the four node types described in the maintenance section above
- Scope statement — a 1–2 sentence description of what the linked page covers and what it excludes
- Regulatory anchor — the primary standard, agency, or code body most directly associated with the topic (e.g., ASHRAE 62.2 2022 edition for residential ventilation, EPA NAAQS for outdoor air quality criteria that affect outdoor air intake design)
- Cross-references — links to related providers where subject boundaries overlap
Providers do not include quality ratings, endorsements, or comparative rankings between topic pages. A provider for bipolar ionization in HVAC and a provider for electronic air cleaners appear at the same structural level within the technology node — the provider network does not signal preference between them. Readers evaluating technology choices should consult the linked reference pages, which present the evidentiary and standards-based framing relevant to each approach, including where bodies such as ASHRAE have issued formal position documents or guidance on specific technologies.
This site is part of the Trade Services Authority network.