How to cool room without AC?

Alternative methods for cooling a room can help save on bills and minimise impact on the environment.

During summers, the increasing intensity of the sun makes it necessary for people to find new ways of cooling their rooms besides air conditioners. Alternative methods are being sought to cool rooms effectively because of the environmental impact and the steep costs associated with ACs. Living without an air conditioner during the hot season may be challenging. The rooms can be too hot, affecting sleep, making one tired, and causing general irritability. In the summer, hot weather combined with high humidity or an area of low wind might make the traditional methods for cooling ineffective.

See also: DIY AC installation: How to install an air conditioner at home?

 

Why is it important to cool the room without AC?

There are many benefits of minimizing air conditioner dependency. It reduces energy consumption drastically, hence cutting the costs of electric bills. It also reduces energy and contributes to lesser greenhouse gasses. Staying cool in the summer heat may be difficult, and it can feel practically impossible if the AC is not accessible. Extreme heat can cause significant health problems, such as heat stroke and exhaustion. If you need to cool off your home (or yourself), try these cooling strategies, but if the reach is too high, it’s better to find an air-conditioned facility near you, such as libraries, film theaters and cooling stations.

 

How to cool a room without AC?

Open the windows as the temperature falls

  • As the daytime heat reaches its peak, keep your windows closed. You may, however, open your windows to let a cool breeze inside when the outside temperature is lower than the interior temperature.
  • Open windows on opposing sides of the home to produce cross winds, which will also help cool the house more quickly, and a fan positioned to bring in cooler air will help you cool off more rapidly.
  • As per the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, you may enhance the air speed in your home and provide a more astonishing atmosphere by opening a larger window to let in air and a smaller one to let air out.

 

Use exhaust fans

  • You may remove any heat from your kitchen or shower by turning on the exhaust fans in both rooms. Additionally, you may use them with open windows at night to assist in pulling cooler air into your house and evacuating hot air.
  • With a box fan blowing out of the windows on the upper floor and the windows open on the lower floor, the warmer air on the upper floor will be blown out, and cooler air will be drawn in.

 

Use a homemade air conditioner to cool the air

  • The room may feel cooler with something cold positioned near the fan. 
  • You may hang a wet, chilly sheet before the fan, set an ice-cube-filled big bowl or bin, or tap frozen water bottles to the fan’s back.

 

Replace all lights with LEDs

  • Every piece of electronic equipment, even lightbulbs, releases heat. In summer, balancing this heat may be challenging. This has an impact on your room’s temperature. Conversely, LED lights maintain their cool. They also use less energy, so your electricity costs will decrease.
  • If changing your light bulbs is impossible, you may use the natural light from your windows to illuminate your home. This will help you stay cool. At night, you may then switch on the lights. You will use less energy as a result of this.

 

Close and wrap your doors

  • Close the doors to areas you use less, such as washrooms or bedrooms, if you spend a lot of time in one spot. Closing off areas of the house helps the room you use most to cool down more quickly and remain cool by concentrating the cooler air in one location.
  • Invest in insulation if your doors have holes at the bottom, particularly if they lead outside. Weather strips are an easy DIY project and a cheap alternative.

 

Make proper use of fans

  • Fans become your best friend if you don’t have air conditioning in your house, provided you use them properly. 
  • Using fans to create a cross-wind is the most effective approach to move cooler air around and drive away hot air. Point the fan toward the warmest area of your home, which should be the coldest room or the outside air coming in via a shaded window. This will assist in drawing in cooler air from one side of the house and expelling hotter air.

Air-conditioned rooms remain popular as an option for maintaining comfort. Natural ventilation can go hand in hand with strategic fan placements, window covering or a creative approach to cooling to ensure that temperatures become bearable despite no traditional form of an AC system. Adopting these approaches does not only provide respite from the scorching sun but is environmentally friendly as well.

 

FAQs

What is a natural cooling system?

Natural cooling uses airflow or natural heat sinks to dissipate heat from indoor environments.

What are the two drawbacks of AC?

High energy costs and environmental impact are the two major drawbacks of an AC.

Is AC gas dangerous?

Freon is unquestionably hazardous to one's health.

How can I naturally cool my room?

Cover the windows and leave your windows closed during the hottest hours of the day. Exhaust fans should be turned on in the bathroom and kitchen to remove heat and humidity from your home.

What kind of cooling is the least expensive?

The first device you should use for cooling is a fan. Compared to air conditioners or evaporative coolers, they are less energy-intensive and expensive.

Is it practical to place ice in front of a fan?

The Green Heating Institute claims that putting a bucket of ice before a fan serves as a DIY air conditioner.

Is sleeping without air conditioning a good idea?

Although rising temperatures might make it difficult to fall asleep, experts advise against using the air conditioner at night.

Got any questions or point of view on our article? We would love to hear from you. Write to our Editor-in-Chief Jhumur Ghosh at jhumur.ghosh1@housing.com
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