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Presentation for. Why Entrance Matting?. Safety for your guests, members and employees Protect your floors Reduce Maintenance Costs Improve Indoor Air Quality Aesthetics. What is an Entrance System?. 4. Result: safe, clean, better-looking, longer-lasting interior flooring
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Why Entrance Matting? Safety for your guests, members and employees Protect your floors Reduce Maintenance Costs Improve Indoor Air Quality Aesthetics
What is an Entrance System? 4. Result: safe, clean, better-looking, longer-lasting interior flooring 3. Scrapes off fine particles & finishes drying 2. Scrapes off medium particles & starts drying 1. Scrapes off coarse particles 1 4 2 3
What is an Entrance System Secondary Entrance – Single Door Secondary Entrance – Double Door 10’ 8’
How big should an entrance be? 30 feet 100% 20 feet 86% 15 feet 71% 10 feet 52% 5 feet 37%
It pays for itself • 20-30% annual increases in insurance rates • Cost per slip & fall Workers’ comp claim: $20,228 average Premises liability suit: $100,000 median Source: National Safety Council, Injury Facts, 2005-2006; Safety Business & Legal Reports, 2006; Combined data from Liberty Mutual and Health Canada; National Floor Safety Institute Database, Mats Inc. analysis.
Reduces operating expenses • 90% of maintenance costs are labor • 39% of custodial time is spent on floor maintenance • 90% of the dust, dirt and grime in a facility is tracked in from the outside on peoples’ feet. • Cost is approx. $600 to remove a single pound of dirt • 1000 people in 20 days track in 24 pounds of soil Preventative value of an entrance system $10 $9 saved for every $1 spent on an entrance system $1 Source: Cleaning & Maintenance Management; National Executive Housekeepers Association.
Better indoor environmental quality Effective entrance systems keep up to 100% of dirt out of a building. Source: U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Oct 2000; National institute of Building Sciences IEQ website, 3/15/2006; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; LEED-NC v3 Reference Guide, 2009. 90% of dirt in a building comes in on footwear • Indoor air has 2-5x the pollutants of outdoor air • 90% of Americans’ time is spent indoors Improving IEQ would deliver $30B-$170B in cost and productivity gains
LEED: EQ Credit 5 Requirement #1 of 4: Entrance systems At all regular entry points At least ten feet long in the direction of travel Either of the below systems: • “Permanently installed grates, grilles, or slotted systems that allow for cleaning underneath” • “Roll-out mats are only acceptable when maintained on a weekly basis by a contracted service organization” Source: LEED-NC v3 Reference Guide, 2009.
The “Why Bother?” Mat ‘No Form’: Aesthetic integration – color & style don’t fit with the overall design ‘No Function’: Not enough lineal footage – 1 or 2 walking steps at most ‘No Protection’: Loose-Laid – will this mat stay put? Tripping Hazard!!
The “Afterthought” Mats The Good:recognizing that “something” had to be done, and realizing that 1 mat alone wouldn’t cut it. The Ugly: Speaks for itself (unfortunately)! The Bad: Deteriorating edging is a Trip Hazard just waiting to happen!
Sustainable Entrance Design Before After
Sustainable Entrance Design • Includes longevity and performance • Length of entrance impacts effectiveness and indoor air quality • Suitable product for the zone • Low maintenance and high capacity to handle dirt, moisture, & weight from pedestrian & wheeled traffic • Enhances the looks of the interior