Dust Knowledge Hub

Clean PPE zones protect workers and welfare areas from cross-contamination. Good design is about one-way movement, controlled air, and simple tasks that people will actually do every day.

Plan the layout and flow

  • Define dirty, transition, and clean areas; mark them on the floor and with clear signage.
  • Create a one-way route with the shortest path from work to de-dust point to welfare.
  • Install MAXVAC Dustbarriers to separate zones and limit air mixing where permanent walls aren’t possible.

Control the air between zones

  • Keep the dirty area neutral to slightly negative and the clean zone neutral to slightly positive so leakage goes the right way.
  • Add an air scrubber sized on under-load airflow to reduce background particulate in the transition space.
  • Close doors by default; add a small lobby if traffic is frequent.

Make de-dusting easy

  • Place industrial vacuums at exits with tools for garments, boots, and gloves; avoid compressed air.
  • Add hooks for overalls, sealed bags for transport, and bins for disposables.
  • Provide handwashing immediately after glove removal so clean handling follows naturally.

Maintain the system

  • Schedule short, regular vacuuming of floors and ledges; never sweep.
  • Inspect barriers, seals, and filters; record checks weekly.
  • Refresh training on the don/doff sequence and one-way rules.

Practical takeaways

  • One-way zoning prevents backflow of dust.
  • Use barriers and airflow bias to keep clean areas clean.
  • Put vacuums where people need them and keep them maintained.
  • Short, frequent housekeeping beats occasional deep cleans.

Well-planned zones reduce rework and support COSHH duties by limiting dust migration into welfare and offices.

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