HVAC Design for Aquatic Stadiums — Natatorium Design Guide
Aquatic facility HVAC design is one of the most technically demanding specialisations in the MEP field. The combination of high latent load from pool evaporation, corrosive chloramine atmosphere, very high ceiling volumes, and the need to maintain strict thermal comfort for both swimmers and spectators makes natatorium design a unique engineering challenge.
1. Understanding the Natatorium Environment
Parameter | Indoor Pool (Competition) | Leisure Pool | Spectator Area |
Air temperature | 27–29°C (1–2°C above water temp) | 29–31°C | 20–22°C (cooler — sedentary) |
Relative humidity | 50–60% | 55–65% | 40–55% |
Water temperature | 26–28°C (competition) | 28–32°C (leisure) | N/A |
Air velocity at pool deck | <0.25 m/s — avoid draft on swimmers | <0.3 m/s | <0.5 m/s |
Fresh air | Minimum ASHRAE 62.1 or NBC requirement | Same | Per occupancy load |
2. Evaporation Load Calculation
The pool water surface is the primary source of latent load. The Shah equation (simplified) estimates pool evaporation:
E = A × (0.1 + 0.3V) × (Pw – Pa) / 100
Where: E = evaporation rate (kg/hr), A = pool surface area (m²), V = air velocity over water (m/s), Pw = saturation pressure at water temp (Pa), Pa = partial pressure of water vapour in room air (Pa)
Pool Type | Typical Evaporation Rate | Latent Load Impact | Design Basis |
Competition pool (50m × 25m) | 80–120 kg/hr | High — dominates system load | Full dehumidification system required |
Training pool (25m × 15m) | 30–50 kg/hr | Moderate | Dedicated pool dehumidifier + OA |
Leisure pool (wave, children) | 40–70 kg/hr (per 1000 m²) | High — active splashing | High evaporation rate factor |
Hot tub / spa (40°C water) | 15–25 kg/hr per unit | Very high — high water temp | Enclosed with separate exhaust |
3. Dehumidification System Options
System | How It Works | Best For | Energy Implication |
Refrigerant-based dehumidifier (DX) | Condensation on cooling coil | Small to medium pools | Moderate energy — heat recovery from condensation possible |
Heat pump dehumidifier | DX + heat recovery to pool water or air | All sizes — recommended | Best energy efficiency — heat recovered |
100% OA system | Dilute humidity with dry outdoor air | Climates with dry ambient (Delhi winter) | High energy in humid climates — not viable in Mumbai |
Desiccant wheel | Chemical adsorption of moisture | Extreme humidity control, spas | High energy — regeneration heat required |
4. Air Distribution in Natatoriums
Air distribution is critical — improper design causes condensation on windows and structural elements, discomfort to swimmers, and poor corrosive atmosphere control.
- Supply air from below spectator level or from side walls — avoid top-down supply over pool
- Floor-level supply diffusers around pool deck perimeter — low velocity discharge (< 0.5 m/s)
- Extract at high level — removes moist warm air from the ceiling zone where condensation risk is greatest
- Positive pressure relative to changing rooms and corridors — prevents chloramine migration
- Dedicated supply to spectator tier — separate zone, cooler temperature
5. Corrosion Protection — Chloramine Environment
Chloramines (formed when chlorine reacts with nitrogen in urine, sweat, and other organic matter) are highly corrosive and damaging to HVAC equipment. All equipment in the pool hall must be specified for corrosive environment:
- AHU casings: fibreglass or stainless steel — never galvanised sheet metal
- Coil fins: copper tubes with stainless steel or phenolic-coated aluminium fins — not standard aluminium
- Fan wheels: fibreglass or stainless steel — no carbon steel or aluminium
- Ductwork: fibreglass duct or hot-dip galvanised with epoxy coating
- Controls and sensors: IP65 minimum — sealed against chloramine penetration
6. Energy Recovery
Natatoriums have large volumes of warm, humid exhaust air. Energy recovery is critical for efficient operation:
- Runaround coil system: indirect heat recovery — no cross-contamination (chloramines in exhaust)
- Heat pump dehumidifier: recovers latent heat — heats pool water or supply air
- DO NOT use rotary heat wheels in natatoriums — chloramines transfer from exhaust to supply
Related Reading on MEPVAULT
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