For the complete documentation index, see llms.txt. This page is also available as Markdown.

Temperature & Humidity

This page provides insights into the data from the Temperature sensor, measured in celsius. The charts are based on data representing the average temperature level per day for each resource.

Overview

The Temperature and Humidity dashboard combines climate monitoring with a built-in damp and mould risk assessment based on dew-point analysis. It is particularly valuable for healthcare estates, social housing, and any environment where HTM 04-01 or similar standards apply.

Use this dashboard to:

  • Monitor occupant comfort across all monitored spaces

  • Identify HVAC inefficiency and zones outside the comfort band

  • Detect early warning signs of damp and mould

  • Provide an evidence trail for compliance and condition reporting


Sensor Status Bands

Temperature

Status
Range
Meaning

πŸ”΅ Poor (Cold)

< 17Β°C

Below comfortable range; heating may be insufficient

🟑 Acceptable

17–19Β°C

Slightly cool; monitor for occupant comfort

🟒 Excellent

19–22Β°C

Ideal comfort range

🟑 Acceptable

22–24Β°C

Slightly warm; check ventilation or solar gain

πŸ”΄ Poor (Hot)

β‰₯ 24Β°C

Above comfortable range; cooling or shading needed

Humidity

Status
Range
Meaning

🟑 Low

< 30%

Dry air; may cause respiratory discomfort or static

🟒 OK

30–60%

Comfortable range

πŸ”΄ High

β‰₯ 60%

Excess moisture; increases condensation and mould risk


Dashboard Structure

The dashboard is organised into four tabs:

  1. Monitoring

  2. Data

  3. Map

  4. Floor Heatmap

A metric switcher toggles every chart between Temperature, Humidity, and Damp & Mould Risk.


Tab 1 β€” Monitoring

Temperature Trend

Line chart with Daily / Weekly granularity tabs.

Temperature (Β°C) over time, with the recommended comfort band (typically 20–24Β°C) shown as a shaded background.

Use it to: spot drift away from setpoint and validate HVAC performance.

Average Temperature by Resource

Horizontal bar chart, ranked.

Resources ordered by average temperature, colour-coded by deviation from comfort band.

Use it to: find rooms running consistently hot or cold relative to the rest of the floor.

Average Temperature by Weekday

Bar chart.

Temperature averages by day of the week, useful for detecting weekend setback issues.

Humidity Trend

Line chart with Daily / Weekly granularity tabs.

Relative humidity (%) over time, with the comfort band (typically 40–60%) shaded.

Use it to: identify periods of dryness (causing respiratory complaints) or excess moisture (creating condensation risk).

Average Humidity by Resource

Horizontal bar chart, ranked.

Resources ranked by average humidity.

Average Humidity by Weekday

Bar chart.

Humidity averages by day of the week.

Damp & Mould Risk Assessment

Multi-series area chart with reference lines.

The headline compliance chart. It plots:

  • Minimum Temperature (line)

  • Average Temperature (shaded area)

  • Average Dew Point (line)

Four dashed reference lines mark the dew-point risk thresholds:

Status
Dew Point
Action

🟒 Safe

≀ 10Β°C

No condensation risk

🟑 Caution

10–13Β°C

Monitor; condensation possible on cold surfaces

🟠 Warning

13–16Β°C

Mould likely on poorly insulated areas

πŸ”΄ Risk

> 16Β°C

Active mould risk; intervene immediately

Dew point is calculated from the live temperature and humidity readings using the Magnus formula.

Use it to: demonstrate HTM 04-01 compliance and identify zones at risk before visible damage occurs.


Tab 2 β€” Data

Temperature Data Table

Sortable data grid.

Minimum, maximum, and average temperature (Β°C) per resource.

Humidity Data Table

Sortable data grid.

Minimum, maximum, and average humidity (%) per resource.

Both tables support CSV, JSON, and PDF export.


Tab 3 β€” Map

Sensor Map View

Interactive geographic map.

Buildings plotted on a world map, colour-coded by climate status.


Tab 4 β€” Floor Heatmap

Climate Floor Heatmap

Colour-coded overlay on an interactive 2D floor plan.

Each monitored resource shown as a heat point coloured by its current temperature or humidity band.

Use it to: find the cold corners and damp zones in a building, supporting targeted insulation or ventilation work.


Filters & Controls

  • Building, Floor, Resource, Resource Type

  • Date range with presets and custom ranges

  • Granularity tabs on trend charts

  • Metric switcher: Temperature / Humidity / Damp & Mould Risk


Tips

  • Falling temperature combined with rising humidity is a classic damp signature β€” investigate insulation and heating in those zones first.

  • Pair this dashboard with the Energy dashboard to identify HVAC settings that compromise both comfort and efficiency.

Overview

The Temperature and Humidity dashboard combines climate monitoring with a built-in damp and mould risk assessment based on dew-point analysis. It is particularly valuable for healthcare estates, social housing, and any environment where HTM 04-01 or similar standards apply.

Use this dashboard to:

  • Monitor occupant comfort across all monitored spaces

  • Identify HVAC inefficiency and zones outside the comfort band

  • Detect early warning signs of damp and mould

  • Provide an evidence trail for compliance and condition reporting


Dashboard Structure

The dashboard is organised into four tabs:

  1. Monitoring

  2. Data

  3. Map

  4. Floor Heatmap

A metric switcher toggles every chart between Temperature, Humidity, and Damp & Mould Risk.


Tab 1 β€” Monitoring

Temperature Trend

Line chart with Daily / Weekly granularity tabs.

Temperature (Β°C) over time, with the recommended comfort band (typically 20–24Β°C) shown as a shaded background.

Use it to: spot drift away from setpoint and validate HVAC performance.

Average Temperature by Resource

Horizontal bar chart, ranked.

Resources ordered by average temperature, colour-coded by deviation from comfort band.

Use it to: find rooms running consistently hot or cold relative to the rest of the floor.

Average Temperature by Weekday

Bar chart.

Temperature averages by day of the week, useful for detecting weekend setback issues.

Humidity Trend

Line chart with Daily / Weekly granularity tabs.

Relative humidity (%) over time, with the comfort band (typically 40–60%) shaded.

Use it to: identify periods of dryness (causing respiratory complaints) or excess moisture (creating condensation risk).

Average Humidity by Resource

Horizontal bar chart, ranked.

Resources ranked by average humidity.

Average Humidity by Weekday

Bar chart.

Humidity averages by day of the week.

Damp & Mould Risk Assessment

Multi-series area chart with reference lines.

The headline compliance chart. It plots:

  • Minimum Temperature (line)

  • Average Temperature (shaded area)

  • Average Dew Point (line)

Four dashed reference lines mark the dew-point risk thresholds:

Status
Dew Point
Action

🟒 Safe

≀ 10Β°C

No condensation risk

🟑 Caution

10–13Β°C

Monitor; condensation possible on cold surfaces

🟠 Warning

13–16Β°C

Mould likely on poorly insulated areas

πŸ”΄ Risk

> 16Β°C

Active mould risk; intervene immediately

Dew point is calculated from the live temperature and humidity readings using the Magnus formula.

Use it to: demonstrate HTM 04-01 compliance and identify zones at risk before visible damage occurs.


Tab 2 β€” Data

Temperature Data Table

Sortable data grid.

Minimum, maximum, and average temperature (Β°C) per resource.

Humidity Data Table

Sortable data grid.

Minimum, maximum, and average humidity (%) per resource.

Both tables support CSV, JSON, and PDF export.


Tab 3 β€” Map

Sensor Map View

Interactive geographic map.

Buildings plotted on a world map, colour-coded by climate status.


Tab 4 β€” Floor Heatmap

Climate Floor Heatmap

Colour-coded overlay on an interactive 2D floor plan.

Each monitored resource shown as a heat point coloured by its current temperature or humidity band.

Use it to: find the cold corners and damp zones in a building, supporting targeted insulation or ventilation work.


Filters & Controls

  • Building, Floor, Resource, Resource Type

  • Date range with presets and custom ranges

  • Granularity tabs on trend charts

  • Metric switcher: Temperature / Humidity / Damp & Mould Risk


Tips

  • Falling temperature combined with rising humidity is a classic damp signature β€” investigate insulation and heating in those zones first.

  • Pair this dashboard with the Energy dashboard to identify HVAC settings that compromise both comfort and efficiency.

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