The plan was to get it working in all the areas where the child would spend most of the time and the sleeping area, too, and that sounded functional to me because then we’d try and switch off the furnace/heater installation and see if the allergies reduced.
When my son was six months, we realized he was getting allergic triggers from something in the house. We cleaned up a lot, swapped out our woolen carpets for hypoallergenic ones, and sealed the garden window because that side of the house always got dustier than the rest. We also called the HVAC repairman a lot more often for HVAC maintenance than others because we needed the best air quality in the house. But all those measures didn’t help because something was constantly triggering the allergies. We had already changed from the boiler after numerous boiler repair calls to the heating business experts, and we got the furnace and heat pump combination they called a hybrid heating system. Still, it was no longer working for us. The logic for it had been that we’d never have downtime with it. The heating expert eventually told us to try a hydronic heating system because it would function as a whole house heater without introducing any contaminants to the air. The plan was to get it working in all the areas where the child would spend most of the time and the sleeping area, too, and that sounded functional to me because then we’d try and switch off the furnace/heater installation and see if the allergies reduced. I was slightly worried about heater maintenance because the additional heat and AC product would also need to be maintained, but I was reassured that it wouldn’t be as hectic as I imagined. The heated floors worked, and it was such a relief because I was afraid he’d end up with adenoids or something more severe like asthma, but we were lucky to resolve the triggers. We might move eventually, but raising him without the fear of his allergies has been a relief.