Plenum + Crawl Space Pressurisation in Indian Commercial — ASHRAE 62.1 + NBC + NFPA 92

MEP Consultant · HVAC + Fire Safety · 11 May 2026

Plenum + Crawl Space Pressurisation in Indian Commercial — ASHRAE 62.1 + NBC + NFPA 92

Published: 02 May 2026Updated: 11 May 2026Original figures: 9

Ceiling return plenums, raised-floor supply plenums, and crawl-space service voids hold radon, smoke, and humidity. ASHRAE 62.1 + NBC 2016 Pt 8 + NFPA 92 dictate target ΔP of +5 Pa to +50 Pa depending on space. Three failure modes we see on Indian sites: under-sized door undercut + transfer grilles violating the 133 N opening-force limit, Class 3 duct leakage eating 30-40 % of pressurisation flow, and missing BMS interlocks that let exhaust fans short-circuit the pressurisation on fire.

Why we pressurise plenums + crawl spaces

Indian commercial buildings increasingly use ceiling-return plenums and crawl-space service voids. Both spaces concentrate radon, soil-gas humidity, fire-pillar leakage smoke, and pest infestation. ASHRAE 62.1 §5.2.3 + NBC 2016 Pt 8 §5.4 require either continuous mechanical ventilation, slight positive pressurisation vs occupied space, or both. Smoke management per NFPA 92 also dictates plenum pressure during fire scenarios.

Pressure differential design — 25,000 m² office

Space Target ΔP vs occupied Standard Method
Ceiling return plenum (normal) +5 Pa ASHRAE 62.1 VAV exhaust offset
Ceiling plenum (fire/smoke) -12.5 Pa NFPA 92 Dedicated smoke fan
Raised-floor supply plenum +25 Pa above room data centre best practice Pressurised by CRAH/CRAC
Crawl space (active) +10 Pa NBC 2016 Pt 8 Dedicated EAF + MUA
Service shaft +10 Pa (smoke) NBC 2016 Pt 4 Pressurisation fan
Staircase (fire) +50 Pa NBC 2016 Pt 4 §4.2 Mech pressurisation per IS 4622
Refuge area +50 Pa NBC 2016 Pt 4 Pressurisation fan
Lift lobby +50 Pa NBC 2016 Pt 4 Pressurisation fan

Pressure differential targets (Pa)Ceiling plenum5PaCrawl space10PaService shaft10PaStaircase50PaRefuge50PaLift lobby50PaPressurisation fan capacity for 30-floor tower (CMH)Staircase 222500CMHLift lobby (4 lifts)18000CMHRefuge (4 floors)12000CMHService shaft6000CMHCrawl space (8 zones)9000CMH

Three common Indian-site failures

  1. Door undercut + grille area — pressurisation fans get sized correctly, but the actual relief path (door undercut + transfer grille) is undersized, so the rooms over-pressurise above the 60 Pa NFPA 92 limit and doors wont open. NFPA + NBC require door opening force ≤ 133 N.
  2. Plenum + duct leakage — Class 3 duct leakage (5 % of supply) eats 30-40 % of pressurisation flow before it reaches the protected space. Specify SMACNA Class 1 (1 %) for pressurisation ducts + commission the leakage.
  3. BMS interlock missing — On fire signal, the pressurisation fan must start AND the building exhaust fans must stop AND the AHU return fan must shut off. Most projects wire only the start signal, leading to short-circuited flow.
// References + Standards
  1. ASHRAE 62.1-2022 — Ventilation for Acceptable Indoor Air Quality.
  2. NBC 2016 Part 8 §5 + Part 4 §4.2, BIS.
  3. NFPA 92:2024 — Standard for Smoke Control Systems.
  4. IS 4622:2003 — Recommendations for Fixed Mechanical Smoke Venting + Pressurisation Systems.
  5. BS 9991:2024 / BS 9999:2017 — Fire Safety in the Design Management + Use of Residential + Commercial Buildings.
  6. ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Applications 2023 Ch 54 Smoke Control.
  7. SMACNA HVAC Duct Construction Standards Metal + Flexible 4th Edition.
  8. CIBSE TM57:2015 Integrated School Design — pressurisation guidance.
By MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE-affiliated; FSAI-aligned.

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