All of the rooms in the local ER are so cold

The aged hospital in my neighborhood has been around for the past six decades.

A lot of the construction is apparently aged despite their unsuccessful attempts to modernize the campus over the years.

For a single thing, there was a mold concern affecting numerous wings of the aged hospital so they had to tear down that section as well as rebuild. The concern is that the air going through those sections of the hospital were on shared air systems with the rest of the hospital. So in actuality, the remaining wings of the hospital were potentially exposed to mold spores from the section that was torn out as well as rebuilt. I can still aroma the mildew smell on that hospital, as well as this is years after the supposed “repairs” were made to the then affected wings of the hospital. I think the whole hospital is affected at this point. Thankfully, a brand up-to-date hospital was built on the opposite side of the neighborhood over the past more than one years as well as it’s finally open. This up-to-date hospital had the benefit of being designed as well as built after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic so they created rooms as well as wings that have isolated air by design. Even the individual rooms in the emergency room all have isolated air systems in them. If a single patient has COVID-19, the isolated heating as well as cooling systems will prevent that virus from genuinely spreading to other patients. That’s unluckyly what happens in nursing homes that lack isolated ventilation systems for their air conditioners as well as gas furnaces. I suppose much safer being in the up-to-date hospital as opposed to the aged a single, especially when I think back to the mold problems from before as well as never wanting to get exposed to that again willingly.

Heat pump maintenance