Indoor Air Quality

Monitoring Air Quality in Polish Homes

An explanation of measuring humidity, fine dust particles and ventilation in residential buildings across Poland — what to measure, how to measure it, and what the readings mean.

Indoor weather station showing temperature and humidity readings

Indoor weather station displaying temperature and humidity. Source: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 2.0.



Why Indoor Air Quality Matters in Poland

Poland has a large proportion of residential buildings — both older panel-construction blocks (bloki) and newer single-family homes — where air quality parameters can diverge significantly from outdoor conditions. Gravity ventilation, common in buildings constructed before the 1990s, depends on temperature differential and can underperform during mild weather.

Heating season brings its own challenges: solid-fuel stoves and coal-fired district heating plants are still in use across many municipalities, particularly in Lesser Poland (Małopolska) and Silesia. Fine particulate matter generated outdoors infiltrates buildings through gaps in window frames, supply vents and leaky facades.

At the same time, thermally retrofitted buildings with new sealed windows often reduce natural air infiltration to near zero, creating CO₂ build-up and elevated humidity — conditions that promote mould growth and affect occupant concentration.

Monitoring three parameters — relative humidity, particulate concentration and CO₂ as a ventilation proxy — gives a practical overview of residential indoor air quality without specialist equipment. Basic digital sensors for all three parameters are widely available and straightforward to interpret.