Hygiene,
down to the suctioned air.
In a medical practice, dental practice, medical centre or physiotherapy clinic, hygiene allows no compromise. A central vacuum ensures the vacuumed air is never blown back into the treatment room or the waiting room — no recirculation near patients: it is discharged where the central unit sits, away from the rooms — and its remote motor in a utility room makes cleaning between rooms fast and silent. All while respecting the waiting room.
Don't blow
air back into the treatment room.
A standard vacuum blows part of the suctioned air, laden with fine dust, back into the room. In the treatment room as in the waiting room, that's the opposite of the hygiene expected of a medical or dental practice.
A central vacuum sends the vacuumed air to a central unit placed away from the rooms: it is never blown back into the treatment room or the waiting room, but discharged where the central unit sits — a utility room, a ventilated crawl space or outside, depending on the installation. No recirculation near patients. The remote motor makes cleaning fast and silent between rooms or patients — the hygiene solution expected in healthcare professional buildings. The hose type — retractable or traditional — is determined on site depending on use: discover our retractable hoses.
Built for
hygiene
- Vacuumed air never blown back into the treatment room: no recirculation near patients
- Remote motor in a utility room: silent cleaning
- Silent cleaning, respecting the waiting room
- Less fine dust put back into circulation
- Retractable or traditional hose determined on site
Integrate it
from the fit-out.
Creating or renovating a practice: this is the time to integrate a central vacuum. Ducts run through partitions before the finishes, for well-placed inlets in treatment and waiting rooms.
AspiWall places the inlets in the treatment rooms and the waiting room, and puts the central unit in a utility room. The network stays invisible, built into the structure. See our approach to professional buildings.
Treatment & waiting rooms
- → Inlets in each treatment room
- → Inlet in the waiting room
- → Central unit in a utility room, away
- → Ducts built into partitions before finishes
No. The vacuumed air is never blown back into the treatment room: it is discharged where the central unit sits, placed away — a utility room, a ventilated crawl space or outside, depending on the installation. There is therefore no recirculation of fine dust near patients or in the treatment room.
The hose type — retractable or traditional — is determined on site depending on use. In a medical or dental practice, AspiWall advises the solution best suited to your layout and to your hygiene requirements between rooms or patients.
No. A central vacuum is intended for cleaning floors and surfaces (dry dust). On request, AspiWall also offers wet & dry systems (water and dust), with a tank to empty or automatic drainage. It does not replace the surgical or saliva suction systems built into the dental chair, which are specific medical equipment.
Yes. The motor sits in a utility room, away: vacuuming is far quieter than a canister vacuum, preserving the calm of the waiting room and consultations.
Yes, depending on the layout of the premises. Contact AspiWall for a feasibility study tailored to your practice.
A practice with impeccable hygiene?
AspiWall studies your practice and installs your central vacuum across Belgium. +32 470 71 22 22 · info@AspiWall.be