Residential rooms and cellars
Bathrooms
Indoor bathrooms are often a problem area. Showering and bathing produces large quantities of water vapour. If laundry is also dried in bathrooms, then the moisture burden rises even further. This can result in black marks in the corners of the room and on the shower curtain-an unmistakable sign of mould or mildew.
Solution: a small dehumidifier can easily help. It draws the moisture out of the air before the walls can absorb it, and also gently dries laundry.
Cellars and underground rooms
Cellars and underground areas in houses are often afflicted by temporary moisture problems. Some cannot be used all of the time, especially during the summer months. These rooms can feel damp and smell musty. What is more, airing the rooms during the day can cause even more problems: warm outdoor air, which can contain a lot of water, flows into the cool cellar. There it is cooled and can no longer contain the moisture suspended in it. This moisture then condenses on the walls, floor and objects.
Solution: selected use of a mobile air humidifier.
General residential spaces
In a four-person household, as much as ten litres of water can be emitted into the air indoors over the course of a day (by cooking, cleaning, and simply by breathing normally). Since you cannot see, hear or smell water vapour, the problems that it causes are often only discovered when they have damaged your health or produced visible damage on your walls. Another indicator is modern heat insulation. This built-in insulation does not allow moisture to dissipate. Relative air humidity rises if moist air is not replaced from time to time. Ventilating rooms is often not enough, and a breeding ground grows for mould and mildew.
Solution: an air humidifier can provide assistance.
Conservatories
Temperatures below the dew point and condensation on windows can beset even the most beautiful conservatories.
Solution: a dehumidifier produces a regulated climate.






