— Dental practices & dentists

A clean practice,
air never blown back.

In a dental practice, cleanliness is not optional: it is a care setting. A central vacuum captures grinding dust, plaster and prosthetics residue — no bulky vacuum cleaner. The vacuumed air is never released back into the treatment room: it goes to the central unit, kept away. The remote motor keeps the practice silent for your patients.

AspiWall S500 central vacuum unit

— A dental practice's daily reality

Stale air in the treatment room
is over.

Fine grinding dust, plaster from the small lab, prosthetics residue: a dental practice produces particles a standard vacuum stirs up and blows back into the room. In a care setting, that is exactly what must be avoided.

With a central vacuum, a simple wall inlet picks up dust and residue in seconds. The vacuumed air is never blown back into your treatment room or waiting room: it is discharged where the central unit sits — a utility room, a ventilated crawl space or outside, depending on the installation. The remote motor keeps the practice silent, reassuring for anxious patients. The hose type — retractable or traditional — is determined on site depending on use: discover our retractable hoses.

PRACTICE BENEFITS

Built for
dentists

  • Grinding and plaster dust vacuumed in seconds
  • Vacuumed air never blown back into the treatment room: it goes to the unit, kept away
  • Remote motor: a silence appreciated by anxious patients
  • A waiting room always spotless, a flawless clinical image
  • Retractable or traditional hose, determined on site depending on use

— Fitting out your practice?

The right moment
is now.

If you are building, renovating or reorganising your practice, now is the ideal time to integrate a central vacuum: ducts run through partitions before the finishes.

AspiWall studies your plan, sizes the central unit to the surface and supplies the equipment suited to a care setting. Discover our approach for professional buildings.

PLAN FROM THE START

An inlet in every zone

  • A vacuum inlet in each treatment room
  • An inlet in the small dental lab (grinding, plaster)
  • Utility room for the central unit (storeroom, cellar, annex)
  • Ducts built into partitions before painting
Diagram of a central vacuum network with retractable inlets

AspiWall network · design and installation to plan, throughout Belgium

— Standard vacuum vs central vacuum

Where does
the air go?

A standard vacuum, a robot or a stick vacuum filters part of the dust but blows the air back into the room where it runs. With an AspiWall central vacuum, the dirt is sent to the central unit and the vacuumed air is expelled out of the living areas or out of the occupied zones, which limits the re-suspension of fine dust. That is what makes the difference in buildings open to the public and places sensitive to dust.

— Made by Trovac

A benchmark for
air quality.

AspiWall offers central units in Belgium made by Trovac, among other manufacturers. Trovac's central vacuum system has been distinguished by AFPRAL (the French Association for Allergy Prevention) since July 2014. An important reference for buildings where air quality, dust, dust mites and allergens are sensitive matters.

Centrale d'aspiration centralisée AspiWall S100
S100
Centrale d'aspiration centralisée AspiWall S200
S200
Centrale d'aspiration centralisée AspiWall S300
S300
Centrale d'aspiration centralisée AspiWall S400
S400
Centrale d'aspiration centralisée AspiWall S500
S500

— An asset to highlight

A visible argument
for your clients.

Your establishment can promote this installation as a real plus: AspiWall central vacuum system, made by Trovac — among other manufacturers —, a manufacturer distinguished by AFPRAL. The vacuumed air is expelled out of the occupied areas, which limits the re-suspension of fine dust, dust mites and allergens.

To display

« Establishment equipped with an AspiWall central vacuum system, made by Trovac. The vacuumed air is expelled out of the occupied areas to limit the re-suspension of fine dust, dust mites and allergens. »

— Frequently asked questions

Your questions.
Our answers.

Can the vacuumed air be blown back into the treatment room?

No, and that is essential in a care setting. The vacuumed air is never released back into the room: it is discharged where the central unit sits — a utility room, a ventilated crawl space or outside, depending on the installation. You keep clean air in the treatment room and the waiting room alike.

Does the system pick up grinding and plaster dust?

Yes. A central vacuum easily captures the fine grinding and plaster dust from the small dental lab. The standard remains dry vacuuming; on request, AspiWall also offers wet & dry systems (water and dust), with a tank to empty or automatic drainage.

Is the noise a problem for anxious patients?

No. The central unit's motor is installed in a separate utility room (storeroom, cellar, annex). At the inlet you only hear a light suction sound, far quieter than a canister vacuum: a comfort appreciated by sensitive patients.

How many inlets does a dental practice need?

It depends on the surface and the number of rooms. Generally, one inlet per treatment room, one in the lab and one at reception. AspiWall provides a free study from plans or on site.

Can a dental practice already in operation be equipped?

Yes, installation is possible in an existing practice. Contact AspiWall to assess feasibility based on your premises.

A spotless practice at all times?

AspiWall studies your dental practice and supplies your central vacuum across Belgium. +32 470 71 22 22 · info@AspiWall.be

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