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Indoor air quality (IAQ) isn’t just a residential concern-it’s a critical factor in how commercial buildings support health, productivity, and long-term asset value. As organizations rethink workplace experience, employee wellness, and facility performance, IAQ has become a differentiator. And just like consumer preferences, priorities around air quality vary by generation.
Understanding these generational differences helps facility managers, property owners, and employers make smarter decisions about maintenance, restoration, and environmental care-especially in shared, high-traffic indoor spaces.
Why Indoor Air Quality Deserves More Attention
A recent article by Victoria Muharsky, ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) Specialist at Green Builder Media, highlights how different generations prioritize indoor air quality (IAQ) for different reasons-from clean air access to allergy management. While her analysis focuses on residential decision-making, the implications are just as relevant for commercial facilities and workplace environments, where diverse generations share the same indoor spaces every day.
According to the EPA and American Lung Association, people spend nearly 90% of their time indoors. In commercial environments-offices, healthcare facilities, hospitality spaces, education buildings, and public venues-poor IAQ can contribute to:
- Increased allergy and asthma symptoms
- Fatigue, headaches, and reduced focus
- Higher absenteeism and lower productivity
- Accelerated wear on building materials and surfaces
Dust, particulate matter, moisture, chemical off-gassing, and microbial growth don’t just affect the air-they settle into floor coverings, furniture, and architectural surfaces, making surface care a direct contributor to air quality outcomes.

How Different Generations View Indoor Air Quality
Recent insights shared by Victoria Muharsky of Green Builder Media highlight that while all generations value indoor air quality, the reasons behind that value differ. When translated to commercial and workplace settings, these generational priorities offer meaningful guidance for how facilities should approach IAQ and environmental care.
Recent data shows that while all generations value IAQ, why they value it differs:
- Baby Boomers place the highest priority on access to clean air, often driven by long-term health considerations.
- Gen X focuses heavily on allergy management and environmental control.
- Millennials prioritize allergen reduction, wellness, and sustainability.
- Gen Z shows strong concern for clean air, transparency, and technology-enabled solutions.
Across generations, three priorities consistently rise to the top:
- Clean, breathable air
- Allergy and irritant reduction
- Minimizing exposure to particulate matter
For commercial facilities, this means a one-size-fits-all approach to building maintenance is no longer enough.
The Overlooked Connection Between Surface Care and IAQ
While ventilation and filtration systems play a major role in IAQ, surfaces are often overlooked. Carpets, upholstery, hard floors, stone, and grout act as reservoirs for dust, allergens, and pollutants.
Without proper care, these contaminants are continually reintroduced into the air through foot traffic, HVAC circulation, and daily use.
At SOLID Surface Care, we address IAQ at the source through:
- Deep carpet and upholstery cleaning to remove embedded allergens and particulates
- Hard surface restoration and maintenance that reduces dust accumulation and improves cleanability
- Low-moisture, environmentally responsible processes that limit chemical off-gassing
- Programmed maintenance plans that support consistent air quality over time
This approach aligns with generational expectations-supporting health-conscious employees, sustainability-minded teams, and occupants who expect clean, well-maintained environments.
Tailoring IAQ Strategies for Today’s Workforce
Organizations that want to attract and retain talent must think beyond aesthetics. Clean air and well-maintained surfaces contribute directly to perceived workplace quality.
- For health-focused generations, clean surfaces reduce respiratory triggers and long-term exposure risks.
- For allergy-sensitive occupants, routine surface care helps control dust, pollen, and microbial growth.
- For younger, sustainability-driven employees, environmentally responsible maintenance reinforces brand values.
IAQ as a Competitive Advantage for Facilities
Clean air isn’t just a building feature-it’s a business strategy. Facilities that invest in proactive surface care and IAQ-supportive maintenance benefit from:
- Healthier occupants
- Improved productivity and comfort
- Extended life of flooring, furniture, and architectural surfaces
- Stronger alignment with wellness and ESG initiatives
Elevating Indoor Air Quality Starts at the Surface
Improving indoor air quality doesn’t stop at HVAC systems. It starts with how surfaces are cleaned, restored, and maintained every day.
SOLID Surface Care partners with organizations across healthcare, hospitality, education, and commercial real estate to deliver surface care solutions that support cleaner air, healthier spaces, and long-term facility performance.
Because when surfaces are cared for properly, the air we breathe benefits too.