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Lifetime access.
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Professional methodology
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Learn at your pace
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No experience needed
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Immediate course access
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Real-world application
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Taught by practitioner
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The Ventilation- The Design Key Series.

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The Ventilation- The Design Key Series.
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What You'll Learn
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Why air comes first
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The science of air
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Reading the building
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Choosing a strategy
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Sizing for silence
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Invisible and proven
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Description
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Full description
The Design Key — Ventilation is a professional course that teaches interior designers and renovation professionals how to treat ventilation as a primary design system rather than an afterthought. It follows a renovation-first method across six modules: understanding why air governs both a building's lifespan and its occupants' health, learning the science of moisture and indoor pollutants, surveying and diagnosing an existing building, choosing between ventilation strategies — natural, mechanical extract, positive input, and balanced heat recovery — sizing and designing the system room by room for performance and silence, and finally integrating, commissioning, and documenting it. The course centres on one principle: improving a building's envelope removes the uncontrolled air change it used to get through its leaks, so a renovation that tightens a building without deliberately replacing its ventilation creates condensation and mould. Students finish able to assess a building's air, choose a strategy, size a system, hide it in the architecture, and prove it works.
Ventilation is the discipline that decides whether everything else survives. A great kitchen, a beautiful bathroom, a calm bedroom — each one can still be considered a failure if the air around it was never resolved. Moisture has to go somewhere. Cooking, bathing, drying laundry, and breathing load a home with water vapour and pollutants every day, and a building that cannot clear them quietly turns that load against itself: condensation on cold surfaces, black mould in corners and behind furniture, finishes that fail early, and air that leaves the people inside sleeping badly and breathing worse.
Most practitioners were never taught to take responsibility for this. Air gets left to a contractor's default — an extract fan here, a trickle vent there — and the result is a building that looks finished and performs poorly. This course replaces that default with a method.
You begin with the why. Module one makes the case that ventilation governs both the lifespan of the building fabric and the health of its occupants, and introduces the renovation trap that runs through the whole course. Module two gives you the working science — air change, relative humidity and dew point, condensation forming hidden inside the construction, and the pollutants (CO₂, VOCs, fine particulates, radon) that come from occupancy and from the materials you specify. This is the knowledge that lets you reason about any space instead of copying rules of thumb.
Module three takes you on site. You learn to read the signals a building gives — mould patterns, condensation on glass, musty smells, seasonal complaints — and diagnose the faults behind them, assess how tight or leaky the envelope is, and find where ducts and units can realistically go. Module four lays out the real options honestly, with the trade-offs that decide which one suits a given building, climate, and budget.
Module five is where strategy becomes a real design. You assign extract rates to wet rooms and supply rates to habitable ones, balance the whole dwelling, place the unit, intake, and exhaust, and design ductwork for low velocity so the system stays quiet — then handle noise, crosstalk, condensation inside the ducts, and filtration. Module six makes the system disappear: coordinating duct routes with ceilings, bulkheads, and joinery; selecting and placing grilles and diffusers as deliberate design elements; commissioning and balancing so the airflows are real and not just drawn; and handing the client a system they understand and will maintain — documented as part of the project's specification register.
This is a Systems course in The Design Key. It does not sit beside the room courses as another room — it sits beneath them, as the system that protects every room decision you make. Read alongside The Kitchen and The Bathroom, it converts "put an extract fan in the wet room" into a coordinated, whole-building decision.
The building will change, the client will change, the budget will change — the order will not. That order is the method. It is the same method you will apply to the next renovation, and to every building after.
Six modules. Lifetime access. A Course Certificate counting toward the Master Certificate.
Who is this for
Whether you're a working designer looking to sharpen your process, a design student building professional skills, or a homeowner who wants to approach their own space the way a professional would — the methodology is the same.
No credentials required. No prior experience assumed. Just a commitment to learning how design actually works.
About the Series
The Design Key is a professional methodology series from Craft'n Build. Each course covers a core discipline of interior design practice — taught through the same rigorous, real-world framework used by working designers.
This is not a series about aesthetics. It is a series about method. How professionals think, plan, and execute — and how those skills are available to anyone willing to learn them.
Color, Material & Finish is the first course in the series. Floor Plan, Bathroom, Kitchen and more follows.



