As more is known about COVID-19, preventive measures continue to emerge and compete.
The engineering firm NV5, which provides third-party verification on WELL v2 projects for the Green Business Certification Institute, has been recommending to its clients Safe Traces, a solution that uses DNA-based sprays and sensors to verify engineering and HVAC controls for airborne contaminants. Its veriDART control verification uses “aerosol mobility indicators” to identify hotspots, assess ventilation and filtration, and inform remediations.
On January 15, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced approval of an emergency exemption request for the use of Grignard Pure, which claims to be the first-ever antimicrobial air treatment solution. Georgia and Tennessee were the first states granted exemptions to use Grignard Pure in certain indoor spaces. Another 17 states have expressed interest, according to Etienne Grignard, co-founder and CEO of Grignard Company in Rahway, N.J., whom BD+C interviewed in February.
“There’s no limit to where we can use it. The issue is just scaling the equipment to the system to which it is being deployed,” declares Mitchel Simpler, PE, FACEP, a Partner with Jaros, Baum & Bolles (JB&B), one of four engineering firms—the others being STV, ME Engineers, and Cosentini Associates—that comprise Grignard Pure’s engineering steering committee.
Grignard Pure has worked with Luminator Technology to devise an air treatment system for mass transit, which has already been tested on trains moving through several states. Courtesy of Grignard Pure
Simpler introduced Grignard to Dr. William Esposito, Founder of the Ambient Group and a leading industrial hygienist, who was an early proponent about the airborne transmission of COVID-19. “He convinced me that Grignard Pure is for real,” says Simpler. Esposito is part of Grignard Pure’s senior advisory leadership, along with William Jordan, the former deputy director of EPA’s pesticide programs.
Grignard Pure’s arrival
To say that Grignard Pure’s arrival was theatrical is no exaggeration.
Back in 2000, lighting equipment manufacturers requested a health and safety assessment of a product Grignard made that they were using to create haze and fog during concerts and plays. Grignard determined that four of the product’s ingredients, including triethylene glycol (TEG), were safe to breathe.
Fast forward 15 years: Grignard’s chemists discovered that TEG—a colorless, viscous liquid that is the active ingredient in Grignard Pure—had demonstrated efficacy against viruses. The company sought EPA approval to use it for virus deactivation, but EPA at the time wasn’t disposed to creating an entirely new category for antivirus antimicrobials. The approval request got shelved until the coronavirus hit the U.S. in 2020, at which point, Grignard began working with Microchem Laboratories to develop protocols for using this formula.
JB&B conducted proof-of-concept engineering assessments by distributing Grignard Pure through existing HVAC systems at two sites: Cincinnati’s Great American Ball Park, where the solution was applied to the owner’s suite; and the 1,700-seat New Amsterdam Theater in New York, where the test ran for two weeks. These tests demonstrated that, in an aerosolized microdroplet state, Grignard Pure behaves like a gas in its ability to distribute, dilute, and disperse in an atmosphere of occupied spaces.
Grignard Company eventually had the testing and efficacy data to prove that Grignard Pure could deactivate more than 98% of the COVID-19 strain in less than one minute. It reapplied for EPA approval in April 2020.
Last February, Jordan and Jack Caravanos, Clinical Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at New York University’s School of Global Public Health, posted a 75-page paper that provides a detailed assessment of Grignard Pure’s safety. (Caravanos sits on Grignard Pure’s seven-person science advisory team.)
Simpler and Grignard state that the federal government has shown interest in Grignard Pure for use in mass transit. Grignard Company partnered with Luminator Technology Group to develop an airborne intervention system (vimeo.com/443217817) that uses atomizers and sensors to dispense Grignard Pure into the atmospheres of buses and trains. The sensors monitor capacity and conditions of the vehicle and adjust the air treatment accordingly. The system coordinates with on-board displays and audio announcements.
Grignard says he’s most proud of the role his company played in creating a new category for assessing antivirus antimicrobials. EPA invited JB&B and Grignard Company to assist the agency in establishing protocols for testing anti-virus products. “A year from now, I hope we’re talking about how we helped bring back some normalcy to the world.”
Related Stories
Coronavirus | Oct 1, 2020
The Weekly show: Decarbonizing Chicago, re-evaluating delayed projects, and the future of the jobsite
The October 1 episode of BD+C's "The Weekly" is available for viewing on demand.
Coronavirus | Sep 28, 2020
Cities to boost spending on green initiatives after the pandemic
More bikeways, car restrictions, mass transit, climate resilience are on tap.
Coronavirus | Sep 28, 2020
Evaluating and investing resources to navigate past the COVID-19 pandemic
As AEC firm leaders consider worst-case scenarios and explore possible solutions to surmount them, they learn to become nimble, quick, and ready to pivot as circumstances demand.
Coronavirus | Sep 24, 2020
The Weekly show: Building optimization tech, the future of smart cities, and storm shelter design
The September 24 episode of BD+C's "The Weekly" is available for viewing on demand.
Coronavirus | Sep 10, 2020
Mobile ordering is a centerpiece of Burger King’s new design
Its reimagined restaurants are 60% smaller, with several pickup options.
Coronavirus | Sep 9, 2020
Prefab: Construction’s secret weapon against COVID-19
How to know if offsite production is right for your project.
Coronavirus | Sep 3, 2020
The Weekly show: JLL's construction outlook for 2020, and COVID-19's impact on sustainability
The September 3 episode of BD+C's "The Weekly" is available for viewing on demand.
Coronavirus | Sep 1, 2020
6 must reads for the AEC industry today: September 1, 2020
Co-working developers pivot to survive the pandemic, and the rise of inquiry-based learning in K-12 communities.
Coronavirus | Aug 28, 2020
7 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 28, 2020
Hotel occupancy likely to dip by 29%, and pandemic helps cannabis industry gain firmer footing.
Coronavirus | Aug 27, 2020
8 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 27, 2020
Extended-stay hotels are the lodging sector's safest bet, and industrial real estate faces short-term decline.