Commercial kitchens move enormous volumes of air. A 5-star hotel main kitchen can exhaust 25,000-40,000 CMH from hood plus 8,000-12,000 CMH from dishwash. Without engineered make-up, that air comes from adjacent dining + service zones, dragging in conditioned air, conditioning expense, and odor. This article walks through MUA strategy: how much, where from, conditioned vs neutral, and the NFPA 96 + NBC compliance line.
How much make-up
NFPA 96 establishes a hood capture velocity (face-velocity at the hood) which sets exhaust CMH. Make-up is then sized to 80-95 % of hood exhaust (deliberate negative balance to keep cooking heat + grease + odor inside the hood capture envelope).
ASHRAE Applications Ch.34 typical:
- MUA = 80 % of hood exhaust → strong negative pressure → grease/odor capture solid, but cold drafts onto cooks
- MUA = 90-95 % → balanced comfort, slight negative pressure
- MUA = 100 % → balanced; risk of grease blow-out under hood
Indian luxury kitchens (Marriott / IHG / Accor / Taj) typically spec 85-90 % MUA.
Where the make-up enters
Three options:
1. Direct supply to kitchen — MUA discharged at low velocity from low-side wall registers, parallel to kitchen line. Best for grease capture; can chill cooks if not conditioned.
2. Adjacent zone supply (transfer from dining) — MUA delivered to dining/service area, transfers via door + transfer grille. Worst for odor + sound; comfort for cooks suffers.
3. Compensating hood (short-circuit MUA) — MUA discharged at the hood face, captured directly into the exhaust. Marketed by Halton, CaptiveAire, Greenheck. Energy-efficient (40-60 % MUA goes back out the hood without conditioning) but capital cost premium + commissioning sensitivity.
For Indian commercial kitchens, options 1 (direct) and 3 (compensating) are both acceptable; option 2 (transfer) is sub-optimal but seen in budget projects.
Conditioned vs neutral MUA
| Strategy | MUA condition | Energy cost | Comfort | Indian use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 % conditioned | 22 °C / 50 % RH (kitchen target) | High | Best | Luxury hospitality |
| Sensible-conditioned (cooled, no dehumid) | 24-26 °C / ambient w | Medium | Good in dry climates | Pune, Bengaluru, Delhi |
| Tempered (heat exchanger, ~28 °C) | Heat-exchanged from exhaust | Low | OK in low-occupancy hours | Mid-range |
| Neutral (ambient) | Outdoor condition | Low | Poor in summer; bad in winter | Industrial only |
For Mumbai/Chennai (warm-humid), full conditioning is essentially mandatory — uncoditioned MUA at 30°C / 80 % RH dropped onto a kitchen line is unworkable.
Worked example: 200-key luxury hotel main kitchen
Inputs:
- Cooking battery: 8 m linear (range, griddle, fryer, charbroiler)
- Hood exhaust per NFPA 96: 7,500 CMH/m × 8 m = 60,000 CMH (close to maximum design)
- Dishwash hood: 4,000 CMH
- Total exhaust: 64,000 CMH
- MUA target 85 %: 54,400 CMH
- Climate: Mumbai (warm-humid)
- Strategy: 100 % conditioned MUA via dedicated MUA AHU
MUA AHU sizing:
- 54,400 CMH = 15.1 m³/s = ~ 18.1 kg/s air
- OA condition: 33 °C / 28 °C WBT / 22 g/kg / 89 kJ/kg
- Supply target: 22 °C / 9 g/kg / 47.8 kJ/kg
- Coil duty: 18.1 × (89 – 47.8) = 745 kW (213 TR) — for kitchen MUA alone
- Filtering: pre-filter MERV 8 + final MERV 13 (NFPA 96 + IGBC IAQ)
That’s a large MUA unit — third or fourth biggest piece of equipment in the building. Plan space + electrical at SD stage.
Pressure balance
Kitchen pressure balance must be:
- Negative wrt dining/service (-15 to -25 Pa)
- Negative wrt corridor (-5 to -15 Pa)
- Positive wrt waste/garbage area (+5 Pa)
This balance prevents kitchen odor + smoke from migrating into dining + back-of-house. Verified at commissioning with smoke-pen + manometer.
NFPA 96 + NBC + IS 4894 compliance line
- NFPA 96 §8.1: hood + duct + fan UL listed
- NFPA 96 §8.5: 1-hour fire-rated enclosure for grease duct in shaft
- NFPA 96 §10: cleanout access at every change of direction + every 6 m of horizontal run
- NBC 2016 Pt 8 §5.4: kitchen ventilation references NFPA 96 + IS 4894
- IS 4894 (1987): Indian Standard for ventilation; aligns with ASHRAE general principles
- ECBC 2017: kitchen MUA exempted from heat recovery requirement (allows direct conditioning)
Heat recovery on kitchen MUA
The big efficiency opportunity: heat recovery between kitchen exhaust + MUA.
Plate / runaround coil heat exchanger:
- Sensible effectiveness: 50-65 %
- Latent: typically 0 (no rotary wheel due to grease contamination)
- Capital: ~10-15 % of MUA AHU cost
- Payback: 2-3 years on Indian commercial tariff
Caveat: kitchen exhaust contains grease vapour. Heat exchanger must be cleanable (plate type with washdown access, not finned coil).
From the Field — Engineer’s Notebook
A 2022 Bengaluru luxury hotel commissioned a 220 TR MUA AHU for the main kitchen. Year-1 audit showed the MUA running at 100 % flow even when the kitchen was at 30 % occupancy (breakfast off-peak). Cause: no VFD, no demand sensing. We retrofitted CO2 + VOC sensors in the kitchen + hood static pressure sensor on the exhaust. Result: average MUA CMH over 12 months reduced 38 % via demand control. Annual savings: ₹14 lakh on the MUA chiller load alone. Lesson: VFD + demand control on kitchen MUA pays back in 12-18 months. Specify it at design.
5 common mistakes
1. MUA = 100 % of exhaust. Risks grease blow-out at hood; kitchen pressure balance fails.
2. Transfer-only MUA from dining. Odor + sound + comfort failures.
3. Neutral (uncoditioned) MUA in warm-humid climate. Kitchen line discomfort + condensation on cold equipment.
4. No heat recovery on MUA. Misses 15-25 % chiller savings + ROI.
5. No commissioning pressure-balance verification. Smoke-pen + manometer test mandatory.
Designer’s checklist
- [ ] Hood exhaust per NFPA 96 capture velocity
- [ ] Dishwash hood + waste-area exhaust accounted
- [ ] MUA = 85-90 % of total exhaust
- [ ] MUA strategy: direct / compensating / transfer (recommend direct or compensating)
- [ ] Conditioning: 100 % conditioned for luxury; sensible-conditioned for budget
- [ ] Dedicated MUA AHU sized + ducted
- [ ] Pressure balance: -15 to -25 Pa kitchen vs dining
- [ ] Smoke + manometer test at commissioning
- [ ] Heat recovery on MUA (plate exchanger, cleanable)
- [ ] VFD + demand control (CO2 + VOC + hood ΔP sensors)
- [ ] NFPA 96 grease duct + cleanout compliance
- [ ] NBC Pt 8 + IS 4894 + IGBC IAQ documentation
Pairs with: Kitchen Exhaust + Ansul UL 300, Cooling Load Methods
