Blogs
Stay informed with the latest updates, healthy living guides, and in-depth articles on air quality from the JB Air team.

JB for Hospitality
In 2025, India’s average PM2.5 level was nearly 10x the WHO annual guideline of 5 µg/m³ (IQAir). That is the outdoor air entering your hotel, cafe or restaurant, before it mixes with guest rooms, lobbies, busy kitchens and service hours mixed with forced air freshener. For hotels, good air should feel like part of the stay, not another operational headache. JB helps properties roll out cleaner guest rooms and shared spaces quietly, with AMC support and flexible filter plans.

JB for Gyms
In 2025, India’s average PM2.5 level was nearly 10x the WHO annual guideline of 5 µg/m³ (IQAir). That is the outdoor air entering your gym, where it mixes with heavy breathing, sweat, rubber flooring and long training hours. Gyms work hard all day. So does the air inside them. JB helps fitness spaces stay fresher with room-wise rollout, AMC support and filter plans that are easy to manage.

JB for Healthcare
In 2025, India’s average PM2.5 level was nearly 10x the WHO annual guideline of 5 µg/m³ (IQAir). That is the outdoor air entering your hospital or clinic every day, before it mixes with waiting rooms, corridors and consultation spaces. In a hospital/clinic, air is part of the care experience. JB helps teams keep it cleaner, quietly, with room-wise rollout, AMC support, remote visibility and filter plans that do not become another admin headache.

The Missing Filter in the Modern Home.
We are very good at inspecting what goes into the body.
We read labels. We filter water. We compare oils, avoid certain ingredients, ask where our food comes from, and choose skincare with more seriousness than some people choose apartments. Fair enough.
The modern Indian home already understands filtration. RO water is normal. Better cooking oil is normal. Fresh produce is normal. The one thing still getting a free pass is air. Which is odd, because air is not occasional.
The average human breathes around 25,000 times a day and inhales about 11,000 litres of air, according to Lung Care Foundation. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also notes that people spend about 90% of their time indoors (EPA, 2026).

In Delhi, Winter Arrives With AQI Alerts.
In Delhi, winter does not arrive quietly. It arrives with AQI alerts.
I remember landing in Delhi in November 2025 and looking out of the aircraft window, waiting for the runway to appear. It did not. For a few seconds, I genuinely thought we were still mid-air because everything outside was white. Not cloudy white. Delhi white. Pale yellow, thick smog everywhere. The kind that makes a pilot’s landing feel like an act of faith.

Why Gyms Need Better Air
The harder you train, the more air your body demands. Every workout asks the body to move more air. During exercise, breathing becomes faster and deeper. One review in Breathe notes that ventilation can rise from around 12 litres of air per minute at rest to as much as 100 litres per minute during intense exercise (“Your Lungs and Exercise”).
That is the part people forget. In a gym, you are not just sharing equipment. You are sharing room air. Most gyms understand surface hygiene. Wipe the bench. Clean the mat. Sanitise the handles. Keep the changing rooms decent. All of that matters. But it is only the obvious part of the problem. The less obvious part is what the room is holding.

Is Indoor Air the Same as Outdoor Air?
No. Indoor air is not the same as outdoor air.
It begins as outdoor air, but once it enters a room, the room changes it.
Air enters buildings through windows, doors, balconies, corridors, ventilation systems, ducts, gaps and the small leaks every building has. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency describes this through three routes: infiltration, natural ventilation and mechanical ventilation (“Introduction to Indoor Air Quality”). So yes, the outside gets in. But it does not stay the same.

We Breathe Between 9,000 To 11,000 Litres Of Air A Day.
The average human breathes somewhere between 9,000 and 11,000 litres of air every day. Lung Care Foundation places the number at around 11,000 litres a day, across nearly 25,000 breaths (“Lung Basics”). That is a lot of air to leave unexamined.
We think about the water we drink. We think about the food we eat. We check ingredients, compare oils, buy better skincare, track sleep, book Pilates, and try to reduce stress.